Atiyah–Segal completion theorem

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Template:Short description The Atiyah–Segal completion theorem is a theorem in mathematics about equivariant K-theory in homotopy theory. Let G be a compact Lie group and let X be a G-CW-complex. The theorem then states that the projection map

π:X×EGX

induces an isomorphism of prorings

π*:KG*(X)I^K*((X×EG)/G).

Here, the induced map has as domain the completion of the G-equivariant K-theory of X with respect to I, where I denotes the augmentation ideal of the representation ring of G.

In the special case of X being a point, the theorem specializes to give an isomorphism K*(BG)R(G)I^ between the K-theory of the classifying space of G and the completion of the representation ring.

The theorem can be interpreted as giving a comparison between the geometrical process of taking the homotopy quotient of a G-space, by making the action free before passing to the quotient, and the algebraic process of completing with respect to an ideal.[1]

The theorem was first proved for finite groups by Michael Atiyah in 1961,[2] and a proof of the general case was published by Atiyah together with Graeme Segal in 1969.[3] Different proofs have since appeared generalizing the theorem to completion with respect to families of subgroups.[4][5] The corresponding statement for algebraic K-theory was proven by Alexander Merkurjev, holding in the case that the group is algebraic over the complex numbers.

See also

References

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