We call a subset A of an abelian topological group G: (i) absolutelyCauchysummable provided that for every open neighbourhood U of 0 one
can find a finite set F⊆A such that the subgroup generated by
A∖F is contained in U; (ii) absolutelysummable if, for every
family {za:a∈A} of integer numbers, there exists g∈G such that the
net \left\{\sum_{a\in F} z_a a: F\subseteq A\mbox{ is finite}\right\}
converges to g; (iii) topologicallyindependent provided that 0∈A and for every neighbourhood W of 0 there exists a neighbourhood V of
0 such that, for every finite set F⊆A and each set {za:a∈F} of integers, ∑a∈Fzaa∈V implies that zaa∈W for all
a∈F. We prove that: (1) an abelian topological group contains a direct
product (direct sum) of κ-many non-trivial topological groups if and
only if it contains a topologically independent, absolutely (Cauchy) summable
subset of cardinality κ; (2) a topological vector space contains
R(N) as its subspace if and only if it has an infinite
absolutely Cauchy summable set; (3) a topological vector space contains
RN as its subspace if and only if it has an
R(N) multiplier convergent series of non-zero elements.
We answer a question of Hu\v{s}ek and generalize results by
Bessaga-Pelczynski-Rolewicz, Dominguez-Tarieladze and Lipecki