,
as a set
, we denote by
the
corresponding element in
.
,
, we define their sum by
It is easy to see that
is an additive group.
It also carries the “
-addic topology” so that
is a
topological additive group.
The next task is to define multiplicative structure on
.
To that end, we do something somewhat different to others.
, we define
.
It has the usual structure of a ring.
For any
, we define its “Teichmüler” lift
as
The basic idea is to define
as the subalgebra of
topologically
generated by all the Teichm"uller lifts
and identify
with
.
To avoid some difficulties doing so, we first do this when
is a very good one:
, an algebraically closed field. Then:
is generated by
as a topological
additive group.
of
generated by
as a topological ring is equal to
commutes with all Teichmüller lifts
.
is a generating separating vector of
over
. Thus we have a module isomorphism
to
.
and
via this
isomorphism and employ a ring structure on
.
Here after, for any algebraically closed field
,
we employ the ring structure of
defined as the above proposition.
In this language we have:
, we have a formula for
multiplication by degree-1-object
:
with constant term=1.
Indeed, we factorize
as
and
.
Notice that the result of the computation only
needs polynomials with coefficents in
rather than some
extension of the ring.