Connected sum is not cancellative

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Statement

The connected sum of manifolds operation is not cancellative in any sense (up to homotopy, up to homeomorphism, up to diffeomorphism, etc.) Specifically, there is a natural number such that we can find -dimensional compact connected manifolds such that and are homeomorphic (in fact, diffeomorphic if we put a differential structure) but and are not homeomorphic or even homotopy-equivalent.

Proof

The case of

Further information: Dyck's theorem

Here, we set as the real projective plane , as the Klein bottle, and as the 2-torus. Both and are homeomorphic to what's called Dyck's surface (by a result called Dyck's theorem). However, the Klein bottle and the 2-torus and not homeomorphic -- the former is non-orientable (and hence its second homology group vanishes) and the latter is orientable (and hence its second homology group is ).