In mathematics, an equivariate mapping is a mapping that commutes with the action of a group .
definition
Let it be a group and sets on which left operations of

-
and
are defined. A function is called - equivariant , - mapping or also equivariant for short if the following applies:



-
for everyone .
That means that for each the diagram


commutes .
An equivalent definition is: The group operates on the set of mappings via


-
.
Then a mapping is equivariant if and only if it remains fixed under this operation.


ρ equivariance
The term -equivariance is often used in mathematics for a representation

or more generally for an effect

used. In this context, mapping a G-set to -equivariant is called if and only if


-
applies to all .
Representation theory and Schur's lemma
Let and be vector spaces over a body and let be the effect of on and linear, i.e. H. there are representations




With

for everyone .

Equivariate maps are then maps with


for all and . Equivariant mappings are in the context of representation theory also Vertauschungsoperatoren ( English intertwining operator called).

Equivariate mappings between irreducible representations are described by Schur's lemma :
- If and are two irreducible representations , then each G-equivariant map is either 0 or an isomorphism.



- If a finite-dimensional vector space over an algebraically closed field , e.g. B. the complex numbers , is and and again are irreducible representations, then every G-equivariant mapping is the multiplication by a scalar: there is such that it holds for all :








-
.
Similarly, for Hilbert space representations of topological groups as they are considered in harmonic analysis , i.e. continuous homomorphisms of a topological group in the unitary group on a possibly infinite-dimensional Hilbert space provided with the weak operator topology , every continuous linear (a generalization to closed dense defined is possible) commutation operator (equivariate mapping) between two irreducible representations is a multiple of an isometry . The (continuous) commutation operators between a unitary representation and themselves form a Von Neumann algebra .
Group algebras
Representations of a group on a
vector space
can be continued linearly to a representation of group algebra , thus
becoming a module. If there are
two representations that we regard as modules in this sense , then a mapping is -equivariant if and only if it is -linear.











The same applies to representations of any algebras ( see also here ).
The equivalent mappings between two representations form a vector space.

For a fixed group and a solid body , the
-representations of
and the -equivariant maps form the objects and morphisms of an enriched category over the category of the -vector spaces provided with the usual tensor product . It is






-
given by and
-
is given by .
topology
A G-space is a topological space X with a continuous action of group G. A G-map is an equivariate continuous map between two G-spaces.

For example, acts upon by turns around the zero point. By



given reflection is -equivariant.


Two G-maps are called G-homotop if there is a G-map

![{\ displaystyle H \ colon X \ times \ left [0,1 \ right] \ rightarrow Y}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/26567553f5020f46977c598c36b6035432a31a0d)
With

for everyone there. (Here G acts through .) The set of G homotopy classes of G mappings is denoted by.

![X \ times \ left [0,1 \ right]](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/57292d99ea0f9458ef890fb409a5af9f5da33115)


![\ left [X, Y \ right] _ {G}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/abdb4877c0c987cb5d219123d41be943263291f4)
The equivariant homotopy groups of a G-space X are defined by
-
.
One has an isomorphism , where the set is the fixed points of the G-effect.


The equivariant homology groups of a G-space X are defined by
-
,
where EG is a weakly contractible topological space with a free G-effect . If the G-effect on X is also free, then is .

The equivariant K-theory of a compact G-space X is defined as the quotient of the free Abelian group on the isomorphism classes of complex G-vector bundles over X according to the subgroup generated by elements of the form . For example, the complex presentation ring is the group .

![[E \ oplus F] - [E] - [F]](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/ac2aa7dfc44eebd02c7fa83eb99c491b9a36f0de)


Generalizations
More generally, one considers group operations on objects of any category , these are then homomorphisms from a group to the automorphism group of an object. Correspondingly, one also considers semigroup operations (this includes, for example, algebra representations ) as homomorphisms in the endomorphism semigroup of an object. An equivariant mapping is then required to be a morphism between the two objects on which the group acts. Since these are no longer necessarily mappings, one also speaks of ( -) equivariant morphisms in the general case .


On the other hand, a group can be viewed as a special monoid and hence a special category with a single object . A functor is then the equivalent of a -link operation on, and natural transformations between such functors correspond to equivariate mappings.





Individual evidence
-
↑ Graeme Segal: Equivariant K-theory ( Memento from June 22, 2010 in the Internet Archive )