Can a space $X$ be homeomorphic to its twofold product with itself, $X \times X$?

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Let $X$ be a topological space of infinite cardinality. Is it possible for any $X$ to be homeomorphic to $X\times X$ $?$

For example, $\mathbb R$ is not homeomorphic to $\mathbb R^{2}$, and $S^{1}$ is not homeomorphic to $S^{1} \times S^{1}$ . What other topological spaces might we consider$?$ What properties of a space may ensure or contradict this possibility$?$ From the little topology I have learnt yet, I have not seen this happening.

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At this level of generality you can make $X=X \times X$ happen quite easily. Take a discrete space of any infinite cardinality, for instance. Or topologize $X=A^B$ by whatever means and compare $X \times X = A^{B \sqcup B}$; under various mild assumptions on $B$ those spaces would be homeomorphic.

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Yes, consider $X := \Bbb Z$ endowed with the discrete topology.

For any topological manifold $M$, $\dim (M \times M) = \dim M + \dim M = 2 \dim M$. Since the dimension of a nonempty topological manifold is well-defined, there is no positive-dimensional topological manifold $M$ for which $M \cong M \times M$, which in particular excludes $R$ and $S^1$ as observed. This implies that the example $X = \Bbb Z$ is the only example that is a (second countable) topological manifold.

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Many Banach spaces are linearly homeomorphic to their Cartesian squares. For instance all classical spaces including $c_0$, $\ell_\infty$, $C(K)$ for $K$ compact metric, $L_p(\mu)$ for $p\in [1,\infty]$ etc.