When one learns about quotient and product spaces in topology for the first time, it is perhaps natural to expect that they would behave like mutual inverses:
Topological Freshman's Dream (TFD). For a space $X$ and subspace $\emptyset \neq Y\subseteq X$, the spaces $(X/Y)\times Y$ and $X$ are homeomorphic.
It is not too hard to see that TFD is not true even for very simple spaces. For example, pick $X=[0,1]$ and $Y=\{0,1\}$, then $X/Y\times Y$ is the disjoint union of two copies of $S^1$, obviously not the same as $X$.
There are two trivial cases when TFD does hold, when $Y$ is a single point and when $Y$ is the whole space $X$.
Q. Is there any nontrivial example when TFD holds?
I've tried for a while to construct such an example without success.
Some incomplete observations:
- If $X$ is connected, then $Y$ must be as well. Otherwise, $(X/Y)\times Y$ would be disconnected.
- We can apply the tools of algebraic topology to see, for example, that TFD implies $\pi_n(X)\cong\pi_n(X/Y)\times\pi_n(Y)$. This condition is quite hard to satisfy since it implies that the homotopy groups of the quotient space $X/Y$ are simpler than that of $X$, which generally fails quite spectatularly. A similar idea can also be applied to the homology and cohomology groups.
- A special case of the above point implies that if $X$ is simply connected, then both $Y$ and $X/Y$ are simply connected (take the fundamental group $\pi_1$).
Any input is appreciated!