Dyadic rational Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In mathematics, a dyadic fraction or dyadic rational is a rational number that when written as a fraction has denominator a power of two, i.e. a rational number of the form a/2b where a is an integer and b is a natural number. For example, 1/2 or 3/8 but not 1/3. (Like fractions of an inch as commonly used in the US, for instance.)These are precisely the numbers whose binary expansion is finite. The set of all dyadic fractions is dense in the real line; it is a rather "small" dense set, which is why it sometimes occurs in proofs, see for instance Urysohn's Lemma. The dyadic fractions form a subring of Q.
- what properties does this ring have?
The ancient Egyptians used Horus-eye notation for dyadic fractions.
As an abelian group the dyadic rationals are the direct limit of infinite cyclic subgroups
Dyadic solenoid
for n = 0, 1, 2, ... . In the spirit of Pontryagin duality, there is a dual object, namely the inverse limit of the unit circle group under the repeated squaring map
- ζ → ζ2.
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