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Equivariant cohomology

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A cohomology that takes the action of some group into account. More precisely, an equivariant cohomology in the category of -spaces (that is, topological spaces on which the continuous action of a group is defined) and equivariant mappings is a sequence of contravariant functors (taking values in the category of Abelian groups) and natural transformations

with the following properties: a) equivariantly-homotopic mappings of pairs induce identity homomorphisms of the groups ; b) an inclusion of the form

induces an isomorphism

and c) for every pair the following cohomology sequence is exact:

Let be a universal -fibration and let be the space associated with the universal fibre space with fibre (that is, the quotient space under the action of given by ). Then the functors yield an equivariant cohomology theory; here is an arbitrary cohomology theory.

For any fixed group the collection of groups together with all possible homomorphisms induced by inclusions of subgroups of is usually called the system of coefficients for the -theory. In some cases the functors are uniquely defined by their systems of coefficients (for example, when is finite and for ).

References

[1] G.E. Bredon, "Equivariant cohomology theories" , Springer (1967)
[2] W.Y. Hsiang, "Cohomology theory of topological transformation groups" , Springer (1975)


Comments

The principal use of equivariant cohomology is in equivariant obstruction theory and in such problems of equivariant (stable) homotopy theory as the solution of the Segal conjecture by G. Carlsson [a1] (see also [a2] and Homotopy).

Quite generally, in many parts of mathematics it is useful to consider also family and equivariant versions of various constructions and results. The various family (relative) and equivariant versions of parts of mathematics are then often also important tools in the non-equivariant and non-family settings. An example of this is the use of equivariant -theory in proofs of the Atiyah–Singer index and fixed-points theorems, cf., e.g., [a3].

Thus, many theories, e.g. cohomology theories, have equivariant versions, e.g. equivariant (stable) homotopy theory [a1], equivariant -theory [a3], [a4], equivariant cobordism [a5], [a7]. And there are equivariant versions of many theorems and constructions such as equivariant surgery [a1], [a7], equivariant smoothing [a6] and equivariant transversality [a7].

References

[a1] G. Carlsson, "Equivariant stable homotopy and Segal's Burnside ring conjecture" Ann. of Math. , 120 (1984) pp. 189–224
[a2] L.G. Lewis, J.P. May, M. Steinberger, "Equivariant stable homotopy theory" , Lect. notes in math. , 1213 , Springer (1986) (With contributions by J.E. McClure)
[a3] T. Petrie, J.D. Randall, "Transformation groups on manifolds" , M. Dekker (1984)
[a4] T. tom Dieck, "Transformation groups and representation theory" , Springer (1979)
[a5] T. Petrie, "Pseudoequivalences of -manifolds" R.J. Milgram (ed.) , Algebraic and geometric topology , 33.1 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1978) pp. 169–210
[a6] R. Lashof, M. Rothenberg, "-smoothing theory" R.J. Milgram (ed.) , Algebraic and geometric topology , 33.1 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1978) pp. 211–266
[a7] W. Browder, F. Quinn, "A surgery theory for -manifolds and stratified sets" , Manifolds (Tokyo) , Univ. Tokyo Press (1973) pp. 27–36
How to Cite This Entry:
Equivariant cohomology. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Equivariant_cohomology&oldid=46845
This article was adapted from an original article by E.G. Sklyarenko (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article