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In differential geometry, an equivariant differential form on a manifold ''M'' acted upon by a
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group (mathematics), group that is also a differentiable manifold, such that group multiplication and taking inverses are both differentiable. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Eucli ...
''G'' is a polynomial map :\alpha: \mathfrak \to \Omega^*(M) from the Lie algebra \mathfrak = \operatorname(G) to the space of
differential forms In mathematics, differential forms provide a unified approach to define integrands over curves, surfaces, solids, and higher-dimensional manifolds. The modern notion of differential forms was pioneered by Élie Cartan. It has many applications, ...
on ''M'' that are equivariant; i.e., :\alpha(\operatorname(g)X) = g\alpha(X). In other words, an equivariant differential form is an invariant element ofProof: with V = \Omega^*(M), we have: \operatorname_G(\mathfrak, V) = \operatorname(\mathfrak, V)^G = (\operatorname(\mathfrak, \mathbb)\otimes V)^G. Note \mathbb
mathfrak Fraktur () is a calligraphic hand of the Latin alphabet and any of several blackletter typefaces derived from this hand. It is designed such that the beginnings and ends of the individual strokes that make up each letter will be clearly visi ...
/math> is the ring of polynomials in linear functionals of \mathfrak; see ring of polynomial functions. See also https://math.stackexchange.com/q/101453 for M. Emerton's comment.
:\mathbb
mathfrak Fraktur () is a calligraphic hand of the Latin alphabet and any of several blackletter typefaces derived from this hand. It is designed such that the beginnings and ends of the individual strokes that make up each letter will be clearly visi ...
\otimes \Omega^*(M) = \operatorname(\mathfrak^*) \otimes \Omega^*(M). For an equivariant differential form \alpha, the equivariant exterior derivative d_\mathfrak \alpha of \alpha is defined by :(d_\mathfrak \alpha)(X) = d(\alpha(X)) - i_(\alpha(X)) where ''d'' is the usual exterior derivative and i_ is the
interior product In mathematics, the interior product (also known as interior derivative, interior multiplication, inner multiplication, inner derivative, insertion operator, contraction, or inner derivation) is a degree −1 (anti)derivation on the exterio ...
by the fundamental vector field generated by ''X''. It is easy to see d_\mathfrak \circ d_\mathfrak = 0 (use the fact the Lie derivative of \alpha(X) along X^\# is zero) and one then puts :H^*_G(X) = \ker d_\mathfrak/\operatorname d_\mathfrak , which is called the equivariant cohomology of ''M'' (which coincides with the ordinary equivariant cohomology defined in terms of Borel construction.) The definition is due to H. Cartan. The notion has an application to the equivariant index theory. d_\mathfrak-closed or d_\mathfrak-exact forms are called equivariantly closed or equivariantly exact. The integral of an equivariantly closed form may be evaluated from its restriction to the fixed point by means of the localization formula.


References

* Differential geometry {{differential-geometry-stub