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Consider the automorphism $\sigma$ on ${\Bbb F}_3[[T]]$ such that $T \mapsto c_1T + f(T)$ with $c_1 = 1$ or $-1$, and $f(T) \not=0$ and the non-zero leading term $c_mT^m$ of $f(T)$ satisfies $m \geq 2$.

Question: Is there any fixed element $t \in {\Bbb F}_3[[T]]$ other than those in the constant field ${\Bbb F}_3$? Namely does such $t$ exist as $\sigma(t) = t$ but $t \notin {\Bbb F}_3$?

Pierre

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Let's write $R$ for $\mathbb{F}_3[[T]]$ and $K$ for its fraction field. Suppose $t \in R \setminus \mathbb{F}_3$ satisfies $\sigma(t)=t$. I claim that $\sigma$ then has finite order.

Suppose first that the valuation $k$ of $t$ is coprime to $3$. Then I claim that the order of $\sigma$ divides $k$. Indeed, there exists (after possibly taking a base extension of the ground field $\mathbb{F}_3$, as Michael Zieve pointed out in a comment) an automorphism $\alpha$ of $R$ that maps $t$ to $T^k$. So then $\alpha(\sigma(\alpha^{-1}(T)))=\zeta T$ for some $k$-th root of unity $\zeta$, hence $\sigma$ has order dividing $k$.

Now the general case. I am a bit uncertain about this, since it almost seems too easy, but here goes. I first want to prove that if $K_0$ is the topological closure of $\mathbb{F}_3(t)$ in $K$, then $K$ is of finite degree over $K_0$. Now $K_0$ is isomorphic to $\mathbb{F}_3((t))$, hence is a locally compact normed field with respect to the absolute value induced by that on $K$. Furthermore, the field $K=\mathbb{F}_3((T))$ is a locally compact normed $K_0$-vector space, so by e.g. Lemma 2 in these notes by Pete Clark) we conclude that $K$ has finite dimension over $K_0$. But then $\sigma$ extended to $K$ is an element of the finite group $\operatorname{Aut}(K/K_0)$. Therefore $\sigma$ has finite order as an automorphism of $K$, and therefore also as an automorphism of $R$.

Conversely, if $\sigma$ has finite order $k$, then symmetric expressions in $T$, $\sigma(T)$, $\ldots$, $\sigma^{(k-1)}(T)$ should give plenty of power series on which $\sigma$ acts trivially. (This has been worked out much better in Michael's answer and the comments below it.)

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    $\begingroup$ Jonathan Lubin's "Torsion in the Nottingham group" discusses the structure of finite order $\sigma$. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 0:41
  • $\begingroup$ Rene, I am satisfied and thank for Michael and Rene. Pierre $\endgroup$
    – user44230
    Dec 16, 2013 at 18:15
  • $\begingroup$ Nice proof! So the conclusion is that $\sigma$ has a fixed point if and only if it has finite order. As I mentioned, the finite-order elements with $\sigma'(T)=1$ have been studied quite a bit; and of course, a finite-order element with $\sigma'(T)=-1$ satisfies $(\sigma^2)'(T)=1$. $\endgroup$ Dec 17, 2013 at 22:13
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    $\begingroup$ By the way, part (1) of my answer shows that the hypotheses of the first part of your answer actually imply that $\sigma$ has order dividing $2$. $\endgroup$ Dec 17, 2013 at 22:17
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    $\begingroup$ Since this question was just bumped, I want to point out that your too easy proof was in fact not easy enough. Say $t = a_m T^m+$ higher order terms. Then $\mathbb F_3((T))$ has dimension (at most) $m$ over $\mathbb F_3((t))$, and in fact $1, T, \dots, T^{m-1}$ form a basis, since using them and a suitable power of $t$ we can cancel the leading term of any power series, and then the next one, and the next one, and so on. $\endgroup$
    – Will Sawin
    Jul 7, 2020 at 22:09
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I show here: (1) if $c_1=1$ and $\sigma$ is not the identity then $\sigma$ has no fixed points whose lowest-degree nonconstant term has degree coprime to $3$; and (2) if $\sigma$ has finite order under composition, then $\sigma$ has fixed points outside $\mathbf{F}_3$.

To prove (1), let $t\in\mathbf{F}_3[[T]]$ be fixed by $\sigma$, and assume that the lowest degree of any nonconstant term of $t$ is some integer $n$ which is coprime to $3$. By definition, $\sigma(t)=t(T+f(T))$, where $f(T)\in\mathbf{F}_3[[T]]$ and the lowest degree of any term of $f(T)$ is some integer $m>1$. By replacing $t$ by $t-t(0)$, we may assume that $t(0)=0$; this does not affect the other hypotheses on $t$. Joe Silverman's argument handles the case $n=1$: there is some $s\in\mathbf{F}_3[[T]]$ such that $s(t)=T$, so if $t=\sigma(t)=t(T+f(T))$ then by applying $s$ to both sides we obtain the contradiction $T=T+f(T)$. If $n>1$ then use Taylor expansion to compute $$ \sigma(t)=t(T+f(T))=t+f(T)t'+\sum_{i=2}^{\infty} f(T)^i H^{(i)}(t), $$ where $H^{(i)}(t)$ is the $i$-th Hasse derivative of $t$, defined by $H^{(i)}(\sum c_k T^k)=\sum c_k\binom{k}{i}T^{k-i}$. But each term in the summation has degree at least $mi+n-i$, which is at least $m+n$ since $m\ge 2$. Since the lowest-degree term of $f(T)t'$ has degree $m+n-1$, it follows that $\sigma(t)-t$ has a term of degree $m+n-1$ and hence $\sigma(t)\ne t$.

Item (2) was mostly shown in a (since-deleted) answer by user René, who observed that if $\sigma$ has finite order (say $n$), then it fixes every symmetric polynomial in $T, \sigma(T), \sigma^2(T), \dots, \sigma^{n-1}(T)$. This proves (2) because the values of these symmetric polynomials can't all be in $\mathbf{F}_3$; this can be shown in various ways, for instance Yves Cornulier notes that the product of the $\sigma^i(T)$'s has a degree-$n$ term.

Finally, I note that there has been a good deal of work studying power series in $\mathcal{N}:=X+X^2\mathbf{F}_p[[X]]$ which have finite order under composition. It isn't hard to show that any such element has order $p^r$ for some $r$. Klopsch explicitly determined the elements of order $p$, up to conjugacy by an element of $\mathcal{N}$: they are $X(1-inX^n)^{-1/n}$ where $i\in\mathbf{F}_p^*$ and $n$ is a positive integer coprime to $p$. The conjugacy classes of elements of order $p^r$ were described in terms of Artin-Schreier-Witt theory in Jean's thesis. Alternate proofs and further developments are in Lubin's paper cited below. Still, the problem of explicitly describing an element of order $p^r$ remains open in all cases except $r\le 1$ and $p=r=2$. In case $p=r=2$ the element was constructed by Chinburg and Symonds; subsequently, together with Bleher and Poonen, they showed that their approach could not be generalized to other cases. References are below.

  • Benjamin Klopsch, Automorphisms of the Nottingham group, Journal of Algebra 223 (2000), 37-56
  • Sandrine Jean, Conjugacy classes of series in positive characteristic and Witt vectors, Journal de Théorie des Nombres Bordeaux 21 (2009), 263-284
  • Jonathan Lubin, Torsion in the Nottingham group, Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 43 (2011), 547-560.
  • Ted Chinburg and Peter Symonds, An element of order 4 in the Nottingham group at the prime 2, arXiv:1009.5135.
  • Frauke Bleher, Ted Chinburg, Bjorn Poonen and Peter Symonds, Automorphisms of Katz-Gabber covers, preprint available online.
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    • $\begingroup$ Your argument for finite order can be simplified: the symmetric polynomial can just be chosen to be the product $X_1X_2\dots X_n$, since it is an element of valuation $n$, it is not a constant. In other words, if $\sigma$ has order $n$ then it fixes the nonconstant element $\prod_{i=0}^{n-1}\sigma^i(T)$. $\endgroup$
      – YCor
      Dec 16, 2013 at 7:54
    • $\begingroup$ @Yves: nice! That's much nicer than my argument, so I edited it into my answer. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 8:06
    • $\begingroup$ Mike, I thought that the Chinburg-Symonds example ($p=r=2$) was just a really nice formal expansion of the $i$-automorphism of a supersingular elliptic curve over $\mathbb F_2$ whose endomorphism ring over that field is $\mathbb Z[i]$. $\endgroup$
      – Lubin
      Dec 16, 2013 at 17:48
    • $\begingroup$ Jonathan, yes that's correct, but that isn't the potential generalization they studied (and showed didn't exist) in the paper with Bleher and Poonen. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 22:35
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    The elements in $\mathbb{F}_p[[T]]$ of the form $T+T^2f(T)$ form a group under composition, the Nottingham group $\mathcal{N}_p$. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nottingham_group.) So in the case that $c_1=1$, your $\sigma$ is in $\mathcal{N}_p$, and you're asking if there is some $\tau\in\mathcal{N}_p$ such that $\sigma\star\tau=\tau$. (Here I write $\star$ for the group law, which is composition.) Since $\mathcal{N}_p$ is a group, I can multiply (compose) on the right by $\tau^{-1}$ to conclude that $\sigma(T)=T$. Hmmm... Okay, so I guess this means that your $t$ needs to have a constant term, and also I guess you've assumed that your $f(T)$ is a polynomial, otherwise you can't evaluate $f(t)$ when $t$ is a power series. So this doesn't completely solve your problem, but it at least eliminates all $t$'s that don't have a constant term.

    EDIT: As pointed out in the comments, what this argument eliminates is $t$'s of the form $T+T^2g(T)$. (And probably $cT+T^2g(T)$ with $c\ne0$). There remains the interesting question of $t$'s that start with a $T^2$ or higher terms. So my answer is merely a possible start, and also a suggestion that the literature on the Nottingham group might be relevant. The thesis of Matthew Gradner-Spencer might also be relevant: https://repository.library.brown.edu/studio/item/bdr:11323/ He looks at various actions of the Nottingham group on power series starting $T^p+h.o.t.$.

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    • $\begingroup$ I think $t$ could fail to have a constant term if the linear term of $t$ is also $0$. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 0:32
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      $\begingroup$ Joe, constant terms don't affect the question, since they're fixed and $\sigma$ is a continuous homomorphism. Keep in mind that $\sigma$ is defined by $\sigma(\tau):=\tau(u)$ for any $\tau\in\mathbb{F}_3[[T]]$, where $u:=c_1 T + f(T)$. Crucially, $\sigma$ evaluates an arbitrary power series at a power series with no constant term, not the other way around. So $\tau$ is fixed if and only if $\tau(u)=\tau$, and your argument says that if $\tau'(0)\ne 0$ then we obtain $u=T$ by subtracting $\tau(0)$ from both sides and then composing on the left with the inverse of $\tau-\tau(0)$. But (cont.) $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 1:33
    • $\begingroup$ this only shows that no fixed points have a nonzero coefficient of $T$, not that there are no fixed points outside $\mathbb{F}_3$. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 1:36
    • $\begingroup$ @Julian and Mike: Good point. I guess all that I eliminated was $t$'s of the form $T+h.o.t$. But maybe that's a start. My student, Matt Gardener-Spencer, looked at the action of the Nottingham group on the set of power series that look like $T^p+h.o.t.$. And someone else (I forget who at the moment) has done further work on that. Which might or might not be relevant. In any case, I thought the OP should know that papers on the Nottingham group might be helpful. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 4:00
    • $\begingroup$ @MichaelZieve: I just edited my answer to include a link to Matt's thesis. He was mostly concerned with the conjugation action, but did prove a few things about the left and right actions. I'm not sure how much is relevant. $\endgroup$ Dec 16, 2013 at 4:27
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    Let’s call $K=k((T))$, where $k$ is a field of characteristic $p>0$. Suppose $\Gamma$ is any finite subgroup of the group of $k$-automorphisms of $K$, any one such necessarily sending $T$ to $u(T)=\sum_1^\infty a_iT^i$, and thereby sending a general element of $K$, say $g(T)=\sum_?^\infty b_iT^i$, to $g\circ u=\sum_?^\infty b_iu^i$. Then if $|\Gamma|=n$, of course its fixed field $E\subset K$ has $[K\colon E]=n$. The extension will always be totally ramified, and with a nice generator equal to the norm of $T$, that is, $\prod_{\gamma\in\Gamma}\gamma(T)$. If we call this series $S$, then $E=k((S))$. Now if $u$ is a torsion element of Nottingham, then the group $\langle u\rangle$ is just such a $\Gamma$ as above, and we get a whole lot of fixed elements under right composition by $u$, all of them power series (or Laurent series, if you wish) in $S$.

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      $\begingroup$ Just to be clear: this answer is an augmentation of item (2) from my answer, namely, that if $\sigma$ has finite order then it has fixed points outside $\mathbf{F}_3$. What is new here is the fact that the fixed point described in my answer generates all fixed points, in the sense that every fixed point is a formal power series in "my" fixed point. On the other hand, this answer doesn't address infinite-order $\sigma$'s. $\endgroup$ Dec 17, 2013 at 1:45

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