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Many of the introductory notes on generalized equivariant cohomology theories assume that one is working over the category of $G$-spaces or $G$-spectra. However, one thing that concerns me is that the action of $G$ is always strict. A $G$-space $X$ is given by a group homomorphism $G\to \text{Aut}(X)$, where $\text{Aut}(-)$ denotes the group of continuous automorphisms.

If instead I want to allow $\sigma:G\times X\to X$ to solve $\sigma(e)\sim \text{id}_X$ and $$\sigma\circ(\text{id}_G\times \sigma)\sim \sigma\circ (\mu_G\times \text{id}_X)\,, $$ only up to homotopies ($\mu_G$ here is the multiplication on $G$) and possibly have higher homotopies I need to think about $\infty$-groupoids, as this paper shows that there is an obstruction to strictifying homotopy group actions.

  1. Is there a well defined notion of equivariant cohomology theories in this setting?

  2. For an $\infty$-groupoid, one can take its homotopy quotient (the colimit). Can one define the equivariant cohomology as the cohomology of this quotient?

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    $\begingroup$ A homotopy coherent group action is only enough to reconstruct Borel cohomology theories, because it is not enough to describe how the "fixed point spaces" should interact for various subgroups $H \subset G$. A homotopy coherent group action may be strictified in the sense that there will be a space $EG \times_G X$ with strict $G$-action and a continuous (coherently equivariant) map $EG \times_G X \to X$ which is a nonequivariant homotopy equivalence. $\endgroup$
    – mme
    Jul 1, 2020 at 18:30
  • $\begingroup$ The right notion of homotopy coherent $G$-space to recover Bredon equivariant cohomology is not obvious to me, but it's probably encoded as some fibering over the orbit category. I'm sure an expert will arrive shortly to explain the right notion. $\endgroup$
    – mme
    Jul 1, 2020 at 18:31
  • $\begingroup$ What does $EG\times_G X$ mean in this case? The diagonal "action" won't give me a relations as it isn't really an action. Is it just notation? $\endgroup$
    – Arkadij
    Jul 1, 2020 at 19:12
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    $\begingroup$ It's just me being lazy in notation. It's a bar construction $B(G,G,X)$, which makes sense in the coherent setting. $\endgroup$
    – mme
    Jul 1, 2020 at 20:01
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    $\begingroup$ As shown by Dwyer and Kan in 1980s, any homotopy coherent ∞-group action can be strictified to a strict action of a simplicial group on a simplicial set, or a topological group on a topological space. So passing to the homotopy coherent setting yields nothing new. As already observed in other comments, for Bredon equivariance one really needs presheaves on the orbit category. $\endgroup$ Jul 1, 2020 at 23:20

3 Answers 3

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From modern perspective this is much more straightforward than the "genuine" version you described above the question. Naive $G$-spaces are just functors $BG\to \cal{S}$ among infinity categories. $G$-spectra are just functors $BG\to \mathrm{Sp}$. You can think of a $G$-spectrum as a functor on $G$-spaces by $E \mapsto (X\mapsto \mathrm{Map}_{\mathrm{Sp}^{BG}}(\mathbb{S}[X],E))$ where $\mathbb{S}[-]= \Sigma^{\infty}$ is the stabilization functor, applied pointwise to functors from $BG$. Hence after accepting some notions like functors and stabilization in infinity category theory you immediately get a theory of equivariant stuff of this "up to homotopy" flavour. In particular, if $E$ has trivial $G$-action then by trivial-colimit adjunction and colimits preservation of the stabilization we get $$\mathrm{Map}_{\mathrm{Sp}^{BG}}(\mathbb{S}[X],E)\simeq \mathrm{Map}_{\mathrm{Sp}}(\mathbb{S}[X]_{hG},E)\simeq \mathrm{Map}_{\mathrm{Sp}}(\mathbb{S}[X_{hG}],E)$$ and you indeed get the cohomology of the homotopy quotient.

In some sense, the surprising thing from this modern perspective is the existence of the "strict" version, which is slightly harder to define internally to modern homotopy theory, even though it is doable.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thank you for the quick answer. I am just unsure about what the notation $(-)_{hG}$ means. Could you also give me a reference where this modern perspective is discussed? $\endgroup$
    – Arkadij
    Jul 1, 2020 at 19:06
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    $\begingroup$ Unfortunately im horrific with references. It is centainly extractable from Lurie's HTT and HA, but I don't know of a good concise reference. Hopefuly someone who know the literature better will do a better job here! In any case, this notation is for the homotopy quotient, i.e. for example one way to compute it is $(X\times EG / G)$ where $EG$ is a contractible free $G$-space. $\endgroup$
    – S. carmeli
    Jul 1, 2020 at 19:15
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Much has already been said in the other answers and comments, but let me summarize a few points.

One way to obtain from a category a 'homotopy theory' (aka an $\infty$-category) is to specify a notion of weak equivalence. On the category of $G$-spaces (i.e. topological spaces with strict $G$-action), two of the major notions of weak equivalences are the following:

  • A map $X \to Y$ of $G$-spaces is a weak equivalence if the underlying map of spaces is a weak homotopy equivalence, or

  • a map $X \to Y$ of $G$-spaces is a weak equivalence if the maps $X^H \to Y^H$ are weak homotopy equivalences for all subgroups $H\subset G$.

More generally, you could specify a family $\mathcal{F}$ of subgroups of $G$ and you demand that you have a weak equivalence on $H$-fixed points for all $H\in \mathcal{F}$, but let's focus on the two cases above and call them underlying and genuine.

(Edit: Reacting to Denis's comment a clarification: Why should we consider these two kinds of equivalences? Geometrically, $G$-homotopy equivalences (i.e. we have an equivariant homotopy inverse and the homotopies are also equivariant) are maybe the most relevant notion. As in non-equivariant topology, there is a Whitehead theorem showing that genuine weak equivalences between $G$-CW complexes are $G$-homotopy equivalences. Illman's theorem shows that every compact $G$-manifold has the structure of a $G$-CW complex, so one can say that most nice $G$-spaces have the structure of a $G$-CW complex. If we want a Whitehead theorem for underlying equivalences instead, we must demand that the $G$-action is free though. Sometimes we are happy to do this, but often this is too restrictive. The different families $\mathcal{F}$ correspond to allowing different families of isotropy. )

It is the $\infty$-category associated with the underlying equivalences that can be modelled by homotopy coherent actions. Taking the coherent nerve of the simplicial category of spaces $\mathcal{S}$, we obtain the $\infty$-category of spaces and the $\infty$-category of spaces with homotopy coherent $G$-action is then modelled/defined as simplicial set maps (aka functors) from $BG$ into this coherent nerve. (If we fix $X$, this is the same as simplicial set maps from $BG$ into $B$ of the homotopy automorphisms of $X$.) This $\infty$-category is equivalent to that associated with $G$-spaces and underlying equivalences. (It is nothing special about starting with a group here. We can instead take functors from an arbitrary small category $\mathcal{C}$ into topological spaces and have a similar story using $B\mathcal{C}$. See e.g. Proposition 4.2.4.4 of Higher Topos Theory.)

We cannot, however, recover from the homotopy coherent action the data of the fixed points $X^H$. If we want to model this homotopy-coherently, we need not only $X$ with a homotopy coherent $G$-action, but we also need all spaces of fixed points $X^H$ with their residual actions and all the restriction maps between them. This can be modelled as a functor from the (nerve of the) orbit category $\mathrm{Orb}_G$ of $G$ into $\mathcal{S}$. In the background is Elmendorf's theorem that shows that there is a Quillen equivalence between $G$-spaces with genuine equivalences and functors from $\mathrm{Orb}_G$ to $\mathrm{Top}$ with underlying equivalences (the Quillen equivalence being given by associating to $G/H$ the fixed points $X^H$). Then one can apply e.g. Proposition 4.2.4.4 of HTT again.

As already remarked by others, some equivariant cohomology theories are only sensitive to underlying equivalences (Borel theories), while others are only invariant under genuine equivalences. The latter are actually more frequent (Bredon cohomology, equivariant K-theory, equivariant bordism...).

The story for spectra is a bit more complicated because there are even more types of weak equivalences one can put on, say, orthogonal spectra with a $G$-action. In Shachar's answer, he describes the case corresponding to underlying equivalences. Genuine equivalences (with respect to a complete universe) require more work. For finite groups, one can consider functors from the Burnside category -- this is the perspective of viewing $G$-spectra as spectral Mackey functors. But this is maybe leading too far here.

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    $\begingroup$ It might be helpful to remark that genuine weak equivalences of $G$-spaces (those that are weak equivalences on all fixed points) are precisely those that have an inverse up to equivariant homotopy for "nice" spaces (i.e. $G$-CW-complexes). $\endgroup$ Jul 3, 2020 at 10:20
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Since the OP asked for references, and about $(-)_{hG}$ in particular, I'll mention a few.

Schwede has very clear lecture notes about the basics of equivariant (stable) homotopy theory.

Many more references can be found in this syllabus, including specific references to Lurie's work.

Lastly, Paul VanKoughnett created a wonderful series of lectures, and this one carefully goes through homotopy fixed points and homotopy orbits, i.e. $(-)^{hG}$ and $(-)_{hG}$.

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