First let's consider equivariant cohomology: if a compact Lie group G acts on a compact manifold M. We have the equivariant cohomology HG(M) defined as the cohomology of the cochain complex ((C[g∗]⊗Ω∙M)G,dG) (for the definition of equivariant cohomology we can look at chapter 1 and 4 of Guillemin and Sternberg's book "Supersymmetry and Equivariant de Rham Theory"). K<G is a closed subgroup, Let MK be the points of M which has isotropy groups conjugated to K, obviously MK is a G-submanifold of M and let i:MK→M denote the inclusion map. we have a version of localization theorem, see Guillemin and Sternberg's book "Supersymmetry and Equivariant de Rham Theory" chapter 11, especially Theorem 11.4.3 in page 178. In more details :
Consider the equivariant cohomology HG(M) and HG(MK) as S(g∗)G modules. Then the pullback map
i∗:H∗G(M)→H∗G(MK)
is an isomorphism after localizing at some certain prime ideals of S(g∗)G.
On the other hand, we have the equivariant K-theory KG(M) and we also have the localization theorem in this side, see Segal "Equivariant K-theory" (1967) section 4, proposition 4.1, which also claims that
Then the pullback map
i∗:K∗G(M)→K∗G(MK)
is an isomorphism after localizing at some certain prime ideals of R(G), the representation ring of G.
We notice the similarity of the above two version of localization theorems. Nevertheless equivariant cohomology and equivariant K-theory are different. The first is the cohomology of a differential graded algebra and the latter is the Grothedieck group of modules of the cross product algebra G⋉C(M).
My question is: is there any deep relation between them? Are they valid because of the same reason?
This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2014-11-20 20:24 (UTC), posted by SE-user Zhaoting Wei