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Dec 2, 2017 at 16:20 comment added spin @JayTaylor: Thanks for the comments. I knew this must be known at least in most cases, but I am less familiar with the literature. In Liebeck-Seitz for $p = 2$ it seems the centralizers of unipotent elements are given in terms of the unipotent radical of the centralizers. Maybe the precise structure of those is a bit more difficult to describe?
Dec 2, 2017 at 16:12 comment added Derek Holt But if you mean has anyone published any lists of this type, or are there any plans to publish such lists, then I think the answer is probably no.
Dec 2, 2017 at 15:55 comment added Jay Taylor For the sporadic groups, I'm certain this must be known. Brauer--Fowler is a key starting point for the classification and I'm sure one starts with the knowledge of the centralisers of involutions in sporadic groups. I would expect this to also be in the volumes by GLS. Most of the information should also be contained in the ATLAS of finite groups.
Dec 2, 2017 at 15:50 comment added Jay Taylor For groups of lie type over a field of characteristic $p=2$ you're looking at a unipotent element, which is in bad characteristic for any group outside of type $\mathsf{A}$. However, the book by Liebeck--Seitz on unipotent conjugacy classes should contain the answer. The work by Mizuno on unipotent conjugacy classes in bad characteristic must also give this information.
Dec 2, 2017 at 15:48 comment added Jay Taylor I'm pretty sure that this list is known. For simple groups of Lie type defined over a field of odd characteristic the elements are semisimple and one can use the theory of algebraic groups to help you compute the centralisers. You'll find this information in §4.5 of "The Classification of the Finite Simple Groups: Number 3" by Gorenstein--Lyons--Solomon.
Dec 2, 2017 at 14:08 history asked spin CC BY-SA 3.0