Before proceeding further, let me illustrate the idea. Proposition 9.5 tells us an existence of a set of idempotents in such that its order structure is somewhat like the one found on the set . Knowing that the idempotents correspond to decompositons of , we may ask:
To answer this problem, it would probably be better to find out what the set
should be. The answer is given by a fact which we know very well: every positive integer may uniquely be written as
Knowing that, we see that the set as above is equal to
The answer to the problem is now given as follows:
The same story applies to the ring of universal Witt vectors for a ring of characteristic . We should have a direct product expansion
where the idempotent is defined by
Of course we need to consider infimum of ininite idempotents. We leave it to an excercise:
converges.
Then defines a direct product decomposition
We call the factor algebra the ring of -adic Witt vectors.
The following proposition tells us the importance of the ring of -adic Witt vectors.
Then defines a direct product decomposition
Furthermore, the factor algebra is isomorphic to the ring of -adic Witt vectors. Thus we have a direct product decomposition