This is a continuation of my previous question on $\gcd$s of polynomials of type $f^n - f$.
Let us call $n > 1$ simple at a prime $p$ when $p-1 \mid n-1$ but $p^k - 1 \not\mid n-1$ for all $k > 1$.
Let us call $n > 1$ nice at a prime $p$ when $$T^p - T = \gcd((T+u)^n - (T+u) : u \in \mathbb{F}_p).$$
Numerical results suggest that most simple numbers are nice:
- For $p = 2$, there are $5484$ simple numbers $n \leq 10000$, and only $142$ of these (that is $2.6\%$) are not nice, the smallest example being $n = 74$.
- For $p = 3$, I have verified that all simple numbers $n \leq 100000$ (yes, 100 thousand!) are nice.
In the linked MO question, Will Sawin and François Brunault have found a counterexample for $p=3$, which is incredibly large: $$n= 2003046359$$
- For $p=3$, are there smaller simple numbers that are not nice?
- For $p=3$, what is the smallest simple number that is not nice? (It has to be $>100000$).
Background. If $n$ is nice, then there is a simple proof that every $n$-ring of characteristic $p$ is a $p$-ring. See also Section 4 in Equational proofs of Jacobson's Theorem.