From the new user tour, the goal of Stack Overflow is to "build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming", and the incentives and disincentives that exist with points and badges are mostly in furthering this goal. The incentives system is imperfect and sometimes unfair, but for the most part works well. There is a bit of bait and switch that goes on where people with questions show up believing we are here to answer any question, whatever it may be, regardless of quality or scope or topicality. But that's not true, and as you can see there is some prodding and sometimes unpleasant downvoting that occurs to improve quality.
Peer review is a deliberate part of SO's design, and criticism is essential feedback for editing a question. Otherwise, how will you know what is needed to improve the question? Even algorithmic questions could benefit from some source code to see what format the inputs are in and further pin down exactly what you are trying to do.
There is a common knee-jerk response for most people to reject criticism. It is natural and never really goes away. It takes time to comprehend criticism, and that comprehension is slower than the knee-jerk response, and takes repetition to get de-sensitized and learn to respect the other side.
Consider whether chatter about the question could continue indefinitely in comments without performing any edits. Surely, it could. You admit this was your initial response, and is a common experience here. Making an edit in the face of criticism or downvoting can sometimes feel like surrendering to an (unfair?) attack or threat (sometimes seemingly from someone who enjoys downvoting or is less knowledgeable). And, it is easier to chat than to write code or reformat code for posting. Downvoting, while not an enjoyable experience for the poster, provides a credible threat that the question might be considered junk, receive less views, and not be answered at all. A downvote or two is a fairly strong incentive to improve a question.
Improving a question does not always reverse downvotes because the downvoters are not notified when a question is edited. There are other reasons too, such as difference of opinion, but the lack of notification is arguably a design flaw in Stack Overflow and notifying downvoters of edits has been suggested as a feature-request. So it is possible that the two downvoters moved on to other activities and might never revisit the question to see if you improved it. It is easy to argue "that's unfair", but fairness is secondary to quality here and it is how the site and community currently behave. Downvotes can be countered by upvotes as is now occurring for this question.
Your question looks genuinely useful, which is the best praise I can offer. A quick google for "polynomial from roots stack overflow" didn't find a duplicate on the first page.