Let $G$ be a finite group. If there exists an $a\in G$ not equal to the identity such that for all $x\in G$,$\phi(x) = axa^{-1}=x^{p+1} $ is an automorphism of $G$ then $G$ is a $p$-group.
This is what I have so for.
The order of $a$ is $p$ since $\phi(a) = a= a^pa\rightarrow a^p=e$ therefore the $order(\phi)|p$
If $order(\phi) = 1$ then for all $ x\in G$ $\phi(x) = x=x^{p+1}\rightarrow x^p=e$ . Thus every element has order $p$ therefore $G$ is a $p-group$
For $order(\phi) = p$ I get stuck:
$\phi^p(x) = x = x^{(p+1)^p}$ using the expansion formula and simplifying i reach that the order of each element in $G$ divides $\displaystyle\sum_{k=1}^n \binom{p}{k}p^k=(p+1)^p-1$. But other primes divide this so I can't easily conclude $G$ is a $p$-group.
I proceeded by contradiction:
Suppose for contradiction that $G$ is not a $p$-group. Let $|G| = kp^n$ where $k$ is not a multiple of $p$ ($p\nmid k$). If $k>1$ then take a $q$ in $k$'s prime factorization. So we have $q|k$ and by Cauchy's Theorem $\exists y \in G$ with $y^q = e$ i.e $order(y) = q$.
If $q<p$, applying $\phi$ to $y$ I get that $\langle y\rangle$ has more than $q$ elements since $\phi(y)=y^{p+1}\in \langle y \rangle$ and there are $p$ distint elements achieved by $\phi$
If $p>q$ then....... I cannot reach a contradiction :'(
Question #2: Show each element of $G$ has order $p$
When $order(\phi) = 1$ i get what I want but I'm also stuck when $order(\phi) =p$
I believe $a\in Z(G)$, is there a way I can show this?
Thank you....This is a pretty hard problem. :'(