Solutions of Polynomial Congruences

Theorem
Let $P \left({x}\right)$ be an integral polynomial.

Let $a \equiv b \pmod n$.

Then $P \left({a}\right) \equiv P \left({b}\right) \pmod n$.

In particular, $a$ is a solution to the polynomial congruence $P \left({x}\right) \equiv 0 \pmod n$ iff $b$ is also.

Proof
Let $P \left({x}\right) = c_m x^m + c_{m-1} x^{m-1} + \cdots + c_1 x + c_0$.

Since $a \equiv b \pmod n$, from Congruence of Product and Congruence of Powers, we have $c_r a^r \equiv c_r b^r \pmod n$ for each $r \in \Z: r \ge 1$.

From Modulo Addition we then have:

In particular, $P \left({a}\right) \equiv 0 \iff P \left({b}\right) \equiv 0 \pmod n$.

That is, $a$ is a solution to the polynomial congruence $P \left({x}\right) \equiv 0 \pmod n$ iff $b$ is also.