What is the multiplicative inverse of $1 + \epsilon$, in the ordered field of hyperreals or surreals?
Simple algebra shows it must be equal $1-\epsilon+\epsilon^2-\epsilon^3+\epsilon^4...$ But how do we prove that that number exists as a hyperreal or surreal?
If it does exist, is it realizable as a finite set of arithmetic operations on $\mathbb{R} + \epsilon$?
If not, how do we characterize the hyperreal or surreal numbers that are not realizable as such? And what symbols are customarily used for them (or why do they not have common symbols)?
If we simply take the ordered field of reals and introduce $\epsilon$, all the standard surreal numbers follow (e.g. $\omega$, e.g. $2\epsilon$, e.g. $1+\epsilon$, etc.), but I don't see how to prove that the infinite sum above exists as a hyperreal or surreal.
A similar question can be asked for $\frac{1}{1-\epsilon} = 1 + \epsilon + \epsilon^2 + \epsilon^3...$
UPDATE $\epsilon$ is the most basic infinitesimal, greater than zero but less than any real. In surreal numbers, it's $(\{0\},\{1,1/2,1/4,1/8/1/16,1/32...\})$.
$\frac{1}{1 +\epsilon} \ne 1 - \epsilon$, because $(1+\epsilon) * (1 - \epsilon) = 1 - \epsilon^2 $. It must be slightly greater than $(1 - \epsilon)$ , but the difference is less than $\epsilon^2$.
Another way to ask this is: $d = 1 - \frac{1}{1 +\epsilon}$.
$\epsilon^2 < d < \epsilon$. Is there a way to characterize $d$ and it's size compared to $\epsilon$?