Consider the $n$-dimensional euclidean space $\mathbf{R}^n$. A continuous map $\phi:\mathbf{R}^n\to \mathbf{R}^n$ is called a finite order automorphism if $\phi^m = \mathrm{id}_{\mathbf{R}^n}$ for some positive integer $m$. 

**Question**: Does every finite order continuous automorphism $\phi:\mathbf{R}^n\to \mathbf{R}^n$ has a fixed point?


What I know about it:

 If for every divisor $d | m$, the fixed point set $\left(\mathbf{R}^n\right)^{\phi^d}$ of $\phi^d$ has its cohomology groups $H^*_c\left(\left(\mathbf{R}^n\right)^{\phi^d}, \mathbf{Z}\right)$ finitely generated over $\mathbf{Z}$, then the theorem of "Verdier, *Caractéristique d'Euler-Poincaré*, 1973" will be applicable. In particular, all the automorphisms of $\mathbf{R}^n$ of prime order has a fixed point. 

In that article Verdier derived a formula of the finite group representation on the alternating sum of the cohomology group with $\mathbf{Q}$-coefficients. This in particular implies a version of Lefschetz trace formula finite order automorphisms.

Unfortunately, I don't know if there can be some automorphism of non-prime order such that certain power of it has fixed point set very complicated.