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Johannes Ebert
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Take a finite group $G$, a finite-dimensional $\mathbb{Q}$-vector space $V$ and two representations actions of $G$ that are inequivalent but the spaces of coinvariants both have the same dimension, say zero.

The first concrete example that comes to my mind is $G=Z/4$, $V=Q[i]$, with the two actions where the generator acts by $-1$ or $i$. These two actions are not even equivalent under outer automorphisms of $G$.

Let $n \geq 3$ be an odd integer and consider the Eilenberg-Mac-Lane space $K(V,n)$, which inherits two $G$-actions. The two Borel-constructions $EG \times_G K(V,n)$ have the same homotopy groups. But the $n$th homotopy groups are not isomorphic when considered as a $\pi_1$-module; so these two spaces are not homotopy equivalent.

The homology can be computed from the Leray-Serre spectral sequence of the fibration $EG \times_G K(V,n) \to BG$. Recall $E^{2}_{pq}= H_p (G; H_p (K(V;n)))$.

To begin with, $\tilde{H}_* (K(V,n), \mathbb{Z}) =V$ if $*=n$ and $0$ otherwise. Thus $E^{2}_{pq}=0$ unless $q=0$ (then it is the group homology $H_p(G;Z)$ or $(p,q)=(0,n)$, in which case it is $V_G=0$. Thus the projections $EG \times K(V,n) \to BG$ are homology equivalences.

Finally note that the Eilenberg Mac Lane spaces can be realized as abelian topological groups and $G$ acts fixing the basepoint. Thus the maps $EG \times_G K(V;n)) \to BG$ have sections, which are homology equivalences as well. So the construction even produces a homology equivalence between two spaces with abstractly isomorphic homotopy groups.

EDIT: since there is a homology equivalence between these two spaces, it follows that the homology with coefficients, the cohomology rings and even the actions of the Steenrod algebra for all primes are isomorphic.

Johannes Ebert
  • 20.9k
  • 4
  • 74
  • 117