transfinite arithmetic, cardinal arithmetic, ordinal arithmetic
prime field, p-adic integer, p-adic rational number, p-adic complex number
arithmetic geometry, function field analogy
For a prime number, the Fermat quotient of any integer is the quotient
of the difference between the th power of and itself by . By Fermat's little theorem this is indeed an integer, i.e. conversely one has for all that
for a uniquely defined integer .
(The -power operation here is the one that restricts to the Frobenius homomorphism after p-localization and the one which is a shadow of the power operations in E-infinity arithmetic geometry (Lurie, remark 2.2.7).)
As the notation is meant to suggest, the Fermat quotient as a map from the (underlying set of the) ring of integers to itself is analogous to a derivation. It is not quite an ordinary derivation, but satisfies conditions of what has been called a -derivation.
In view of this, in the context of arithmetic differential equations the Fermat quotient is interpreted as an analog in arithmetic geometry of actual derivations in algebraic geometry/complex analytic geometry. For more on this see also at Borger's absolute geometry the section Motivation.
Last revised on January 26, 2020 at 07:26:38. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.