Restricted Witt algebra and analog of Fermat's Theorem











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I found this interesting result in the work of D. B. Fuchs and T. Evans(2002), and also I have proved this result using Bell polynomials. However, I suppose that there should be more easier solution. Any ideas?



Let $D=ffrac{d}{dx}$ be an operator and $f$ be a function of $x$, so



$D^{p-2}(f)+frac{d^{p-2}}{dx^{p-2}}left(f^{p-1}(x)right)equiv 0;(mod; p)$










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    I assume the $f$ in $D$ is the same as in $f$?
    – darij grinberg
    Nov 20 at 16:31















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I found this interesting result in the work of D. B. Fuchs and T. Evans(2002), and also I have proved this result using Bell polynomials. However, I suppose that there should be more easier solution. Any ideas?



Let $D=ffrac{d}{dx}$ be an operator and $f$ be a function of $x$, so



$D^{p-2}(f)+frac{d^{p-2}}{dx^{p-2}}left(f^{p-1}(x)right)equiv 0;(mod; p)$










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 1




    I assume the $f$ in $D$ is the same as in $f$?
    – darij grinberg
    Nov 20 at 16:31













up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I found this interesting result in the work of D. B. Fuchs and T. Evans(2002), and also I have proved this result using Bell polynomials. However, I suppose that there should be more easier solution. Any ideas?



Let $D=ffrac{d}{dx}$ be an operator and $f$ be a function of $x$, so



$D^{p-2}(f)+frac{d^{p-2}}{dx^{p-2}}left(f^{p-1}(x)right)equiv 0;(mod; p)$










share|cite|improve this question















I found this interesting result in the work of D. B. Fuchs and T. Evans(2002), and also I have proved this result using Bell polynomials. However, I suppose that there should be more easier solution. Any ideas?



Let $D=ffrac{d}{dx}$ be an operator and $f$ be a function of $x$, so



$D^{p-2}(f)+frac{d^{p-2}}{dx^{p-2}}left(f^{p-1}(x)right)equiv 0;(mod; p)$







abstract-algebra combinatorics number-theory lie-algebras






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share|cite|improve this question













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edited 2 days ago









N. F. Taussig

42.6k93254




42.6k93254










asked Nov 20 at 11:05









Bakhytbek

4711




4711








  • 1




    I assume the $f$ in $D$ is the same as in $f$?
    – darij grinberg
    Nov 20 at 16:31














  • 1




    I assume the $f$ in $D$ is the same as in $f$?
    – darij grinberg
    Nov 20 at 16:31








1




1




I assume the $f$ in $D$ is the same as in $f$?
– darij grinberg
Nov 20 at 16:31




I assume the $f$ in $D$ is the same as in $f$?
– darij grinberg
Nov 20 at 16:31















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