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When I was studying topology I remember being able to demonstrate that the set of topological surfaces with any number of punctures (including the projective plane, Klein bottle, Moebius strip, double torus, etc.), together with their associated inverses, was not a group with respect to the operations of connection and disconnection. I could show with a sequence of drawings that it is possible to connect two Klein bottles, deform the surface, and disconnect a torus from a single remaining Klein bottle, i.e. K+K = K+T, so inverses are not well defined even though the operator is otherwise associative on that set, has an identity (the sphere), and is also Abelian.

I never made much progress in my understanding beyond this point so I am interested in any answer that can simply explain what is going on here (am I misinterpreting something else as a topological property?), else provide a reference (I'm not even sure what branch of topology addresses this). One slightly more specific question I have is: what is an example of a collection of topologies which does form a group under connection and is this ever a useful property to have?

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    Given a monoid $M$ there exists a group $G_M$ and a monoid-map $\phi : M \to G_M$. It satisfies this property, if $G$ is any group and $f : M \to G$ is any monoid map, then you can factor $f$ as a composite $ f = f' \circ \phi$ where $f' : G_M \to G$ is some morphism of groups. This is called the group completion, and you build it from $M$ the same way you build the integers from the natural numbers. The condition that $\phi : M \to G_M$ is an embedding is just that, some condition, and having $M$ being free commutative monoid suffices but is not neccessary.2010-08-20

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Right, surfaces under the connect-sum operation form a commutative monoid, but it's not a free commutative monoid. It's the quotient of the free commutative monoid on two generators (projective space, torus) by the relation you mentioned (in these generators you'd express the klein bottle as the connect-sum of two projective spaces).

This is a monoid where the only invertible element is the sphere. The proof is that the "genus" is additive under connect sum, and is only zero for the sphere. Here the 'genus' is the sum of < the number of projective-space summands > + < twice the number of torus summands > (for this to make sense you have to express your surface as a connect-sum of only projective spaces and tori.

I'm not quite sure what your question is. In the sense that there's no question mark in your 1st paragraph.

I think there's a terminology problem. "Collection of topologies" literally means "a collection of subsets of various sets satisfying some rules".

If you replace surfaces with various other objects, the connect-sum operation can be a group operation. For example, if your objects are smooth embeddings of $S^3$ in $S^6$, taken up to isotopy, then the connect-sum operation turns this collection into an infinite-cyclic group.

Strangely enough, embeddings of $S^j$ in $S^n$, taken up to isotopy and with operation given by connect sum form a group whenever n > j+2. Sometimes it's a group for silly reasons -- there is only one such embedding up to isotopy provided 2n-3j-3>0. But when $2n-3j-3 \leq 0$ generally there are many.

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Connected sum usually gives a structure of a commutative monoid but rarely of a group. Absence of inverse elements is explained (e.g. for manifolds or for knots) by Mazur swindle (wiki, Terence Tao).