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So, in Munkres' chapter about the Stone-Čech compactification, there is a Lemma at the beginning of the chapter the proof of which seems a bit unclear to me. The Lemma states:
Let X be a space and let h : X --> Z be an imbedding of X in the compact Hausdorff space Z. Then there exists a corresponding compactification Y of X with the property that there is an imbedding H : Y --> Z that equals h on X. This compactification is uniquely determined up to equivalence.
Now, the first part of the proof is perfectly clear; given the map h, let Y0 denote the closure of h(X) in Z. Since Y0 is a subspace of a Hausdorff space, it is Hausdorff, and since it is closed, it is compact. Hence Y0 is a compactification of h(X).
But now it says: "We now construct a space Y containing X such that the pair (X, Y) is homeomorphic to (X0, Y0). Let us choose a set A disjoint from X that is in bijective correspondence with the set Y0\X0 under some map k : A --> Y0\X0."
This seems an easy step, but how do we know that such a set A exists? What guarantees us the legicimacy of this step? Is this equivalent to saying that, given some set S, we can choose a set S' such that these two can be put in bijective correspondence?
Let X be a space and let h : X --> Z be an imbedding of X in the compact Hausdorff space Z. Then there exists a corresponding compactification Y of X with the property that there is an imbedding H : Y --> Z that equals h on X. This compactification is uniquely determined up to equivalence.
Now, the first part of the proof is perfectly clear; given the map h, let Y0 denote the closure of h(X) in Z. Since Y0 is a subspace of a Hausdorff space, it is Hausdorff, and since it is closed, it is compact. Hence Y0 is a compactification of h(X).
But now it says: "We now construct a space Y containing X such that the pair (X, Y) is homeomorphic to (X0, Y0). Let us choose a set A disjoint from X that is in bijective correspondence with the set Y0\X0 under some map k : A --> Y0\X0."
This seems an easy step, but how do we know that such a set A exists? What guarantees us the legicimacy of this step? Is this equivalent to saying that, given some set S, we can choose a set S' such that these two can be put in bijective correspondence?