I have some trouble understanding an example from my reader$^1$. We have the fifth root of unity $\zeta_5=e^{2\pi i/5}$, so by definition $\zeta_5^5=1$.
Then I want to find its minimal polynomial over $\mathbb{Q}$. I know that $\zeta_5$ is zero of $(X^5-1)$. I see that $1, \zeta_5,\zeta_5^2, \zeta_5^3, \zeta_5^4$ are zeros of this polynomial. My reader however gives $(X^5-1)/(X-1)=X^4+X^3+X^2+X+1$ as the minimal polynomial. Why? I think I had to see that $(X^5-1)$ was reducible or something? How do I see that. And once I notice it, how do I confirm that $\zeta_5$ is a zero of $X^4+X^3+X^2+X+1$, and how do I confirm that also $\zeta_5^2, \zeta_5^3, \zeta_5^4$ are zeros of it? These zeros belong to $\mathbb{Q}(\zeta_5)$.
Once I understand this: By some theorem I know that the number of zeros of a minimal polynomial of $\alpha$ is the order of the group $|\text{Gal}(K(\alpha)/K)|$ for some field K. So we have $|\text{Gal}(\mathbb{Q}(\zeta_5)/\mathbb{Q}$)|=4.
We then see that $\text{Gal}(\mathbb{Q}(\zeta_5)/\mathbb{Q})=\mathbb\{\text{id},\sigma,\sigma^2,\sigma^3\}$ where $\sigma$ is a $K$-automorphism$^1$ given by $\sigma:\zeta\mapsto\zeta^3$. How and why did they pick/find this $K$-automorphism?
$1:$ Example 8.2.11 from Rings and Galois Theory, 2018, Department of Mathematics, Utrecht University
$2:$
Let $K$ be a field and $L$ a finite extension. An automorphism $\sigma: L\to L$ is called a $K$-automorphism if it is a field isomorphism with the additional property that $\sigma(x)=x$ for all $x\in K$.