First let's consider equivariant cohomology: if a compact Lie group $G$ acts on a compact manifold $M$. We have the equivariant cohomology $ H_G(M)$ defined as the cohomology of the cochain complex $((\mathbb{C}[\mathfrak{g^*}]\otimes \Omega^{\bullet}{M})^G, d_G)$ (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 $M^K$ be the points of $M$ which has isotropy groups conjugated to $K$, obviously $M^K$ is a $G$-submanifold of $M$ and let $~i: M^K \rightarrow M$ 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 $ H_G(M)$ and $H_G(M^K)$ as $ S( \mathfrak{g^* })^G $ modules. Then the pullback map
$$
i^*: H^ * _G(M)\rightarrow H^ *_G(M^K)
$$
is an isomorphism after localizing at some certain prime ideals of $ S( \mathfrak{g^* })^G $.
On the other hand, we have the equivariant K-theory $K_G(M)$ 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
$$
i^*: K^ * _G(M)\rightarrow K^ *_G(M^K)
$$
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 $G \ltimes C(M)$.
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