Half-integer

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates In mathematics, a half-integer is a number of the form n+12, where n is an integer. For example, 412,7/2,132,8.5 are all half-integers. The name "half-integer" is perhaps misleading, as each integer n is itself half of the integer 2n. A name such as "integer-plus-half" may be more accurate, but while not literally true, "half integer" is the conventional term.Template:Citation needed Half-integers occur frequently enough in mathematics and in quantum mechanics that a distinct term is convenient.

Note that halving an integer does not always produce a half-integer; this is only true for odd integers. For this reason, half-integers are also sometimes called half-odd-integers. Half-integers are a subset of the dyadic rationals (numbers produced by dividing an integer by a power of two).[1]

Notation and algebraic structure

The set of all half-integers is often denoted +12=(12). The integers and half-integers together form a group under the addition operation, which may be denoted[2] 12. However, these numbers do not form a ring because the product of two half-integers is not a half-integer; e.g. 12×12=1412.[3] The smallest ring containing them is [12], the ring of dyadic rationals.

Properties

  • The sum of n half-integers is a half-integer if and only if n is odd. This includes n=0 since the empty sum 0 is not half-integer.
  • The negative of a half-integer is a half-integer.
  • The cardinality of the set of half-integers is equal to that of the integers. This is due to the existence of a bijection from the integers to the half-integers: f:xx+0.5, where x is an integer

Uses

Sphere packing

The densest lattice packing of unit spheres in four dimensions (called the D4 lattice) places a sphere at every point whose coordinates are either all integers or all half-integers. This packing is closely related to the Hurwitz integers: quaternions whose real coefficients are either all integers or all half-integers.[4]

Physics

In physics, the Pauli exclusion principle results from definition of fermions as particles which have spins that are half-integers.[5]

The energy levels of the quantum harmonic oscillator occur at half-integers and thus its lowest energy is not zero.[6]

Sphere volume

Although the factorial function is defined only for integer arguments, it can be extended to fractional arguments using the gamma function. The gamma function for half-integers is an important part of the formula for the [[volume of an n-ball|volume of an Template:Mvar-dimensional ball]] of radius R,[7] Vn(R)=πn/2Γ(n2+1)Rn. The values of the gamma function on half-integers are integer multiples of the square root of pi: Γ(12+n)=(2n1)!!2nπ=(2n)!4nn!π where n!! denotes the double factorial.

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Rational numbers