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$\DeclareMathOperator\Spec{Spec}$Let $p$ be a prime number, and $A$ a commutative ring. Recall that a $p$-derivation on $A$, or a $\delta$-ring structure on $A$ is a set map $\delta : A \to A$ such that $\phi(x) = x^p + p\delta(x)$ is a ring homomorphism; if $p$ is a zero-divisor in $A$, it is additionally required that "$\delta$ satisfies all equations which this description would entail had $A$ been $p$-torsionfree" (see the link for a precise definition). Thus $\delta$ encodes a sort of "rigid lift of Frobenius" from $A/p$.

There is an analogy lurking in the term "$p$-derivation": the analogy says that $\delta$ is something like a derivation. I would like to understand this analogy better.

Question 1: In what ways is it useful to think of a $p$-derivation as being like a derivation?

Question 2: Are there places where the analogy comes up short, and we should not really think that a $p$-derivation is like a derivation?

Notes:

  • There are at least two books, both by Buium, which take this analogy and run with it. So I should probably start by reading the introductions to these books in detail.

  • There's also a theorem, again of Buium which says that in some weak "up to isogeny" sense the derivations, $p$-derviations, difference operators, and $p$-difference operators are the "only" plethories satisfying some conditions. But the result is not quite as crisp as one might like. See here for some discussion.

  • Note that all the references so far are due to a single author (Buium). I'd appreciate getting a perspective which puts Buium's work into context with number theory and algebraic geometry in general.

  • (Question 3:) One thing I'd like to understand in these terms is the universal property of the $p$-typical Witt vectors. I guess $\Spec W(A)$ is $\Spec A$ with a "$p$-tangent-direction freely added to it" or something? What is the analogous object when $p$-derivations are replaced with ordinary derivations?

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    $\begingroup$ For question 3, and a ring $A$, I guess the analog to $W(A)$ is $A[[t]]$. $\endgroup$
    – Leo Alonso
    Commented May 3, 2023 at 17:58
  • $\begingroup$ just refining the answer for 3, I think it is not A[[t]] but a divided power version of same, I learned this from a talk of Jim Borger but the construction is as follows. if (R, d) is a differential ring and f: R -> A is a ring homomorphism, you can observe that the formula r \mapsto sum f(d^n(r)) t^n / n! defines a homomorphism, and this is the same story as for Witt vectors, easier because everything is additive. $\endgroup$
    – pupshaw
    Commented May 3, 2023 at 20:24
  • $\begingroup$ sorry let me say that better: the forgetful functor from differential rings to ordinary rings has a right adjoint, sometimes called W^diff, which is given in formulas by divided power series as I wrote above. $\endgroup$
    – pupshaw
    Commented May 3, 2023 at 20:33
  • $\begingroup$ Regarding your Q3 (understood as "what is really Witt vectors functor"), you can read any papers of Hesselholt and Kaledin on (topological) Hochschild-Witt complex, esp. "Witt vectors as a polynomial functor". I guess you can try to reformulate state of the art into (p-)derivations language, by noting that all reasonable ring operations arise as sections of a projection $\pi: T(A) \to A$, where T is a polynomial (...usually quadratic) functor on category of (noncommutative) rings, and $\pi$ is a natural transformation. $\endgroup$
    – Denis T
    Commented May 6, 2023 at 4:10

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