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One half

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(Redirected from Halves) For the computer virus, see OneHalf. "Half" redirects here; for other uses that do not relate to "one half" as a number (½), see Half (disambiguation). Irreducible fraction Natural number
← −0.5 0.5 1.5 →
−1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Cardinalone half
Ordinal1⁄2th (halfth)
Binary0.12
Ternary0.11111111113
Senary0.36
Octal0.48
Duodecimal0.612
Hexadecimal0.816
Greek
Roman numeralsS
Egyptian hieroglyph𓐛
Hebrewחֵצִ
Malayalam
Chinese
Tibetan

One half is the multiplicative inverse of 2. It is an irreducible fraction with a numerator of 1 and a denominator of 2. It often appears in mathematical equations, recipes and measurements.

As a word

One half is one of the few fractions which are commonly expressed in natural languages by suppletion rather than regular derivation. In English, for example, compare the compound "one half" with other regular formations like "one-sixth".

A half can also be said to be one part of something divided into two equal parts. It is acceptable to write one half as a hyphenated word, one-half.

Mathematics

One half is the rational number that lies midway between 0 and 1 on the number line. Multiplication by one half is equivalent to division by two, or "halving"; conversely, division by one half is equivalent to multiplication by two, or "doubling".

A square of side length one, here dissected into rectangles whose areas are successive powers of one half.

A number raised to the power of one half is equal to its square root.

The area of a triangle is one half its base and altitude (or height).

Fundamental region of the modular j-invariant in the upper half-plane (shaded gray), with modular discriminant | τ | 1 {\displaystyle |\tau |\geq 1} and 1 2 < R ( τ ) 1 2 {\displaystyle -{\tfrac {1}{2}}<{\mathfrak {R}}(\tau )\leq {\tfrac {1}{2}}} , where 1 2 < R ( τ ) < 0 | τ | > 1. {\displaystyle -{\tfrac {1}{2}}<{\mathfrak {R}}(\tau )<0\Rightarrow |\tau |>1.}

The gamma function evaluated at one half is the square root of pi.

It has two different decimal representations in base ten, the familiar 0.5 {\displaystyle 0.5} and the recurring 0.4 9 ¯ {\displaystyle 0.4{\overline {9}}} , with a similar pair of expansions in any even base; while in odd bases, one half has no terminating representation.

The Bernoulli number B 1 {\displaystyle B_{1}} has the value ± 1 2 {\displaystyle \pm {\tfrac {1}{2}}} (its sign depending on competing conventions).

The Riemann hypothesis is the conjecture that every nontrivial complex root of the Riemann zeta function has a real part equal to 1 2 {\displaystyle {\tfrac {1}{2}}} .

Computer characters

½
vulgar fraction one half
In UnicodeU+00BD ½ VULGAR FRACTION ONE HALF
Related
See alsoU+00BC ¼ VULGAR FRACTION ONE QUARTER
U+00BE ¾ VULGAR FRACTION THREE QUARTERS

The "one-half" symbol has its own code point as a precomposed character in the Number Forms block of Unicode, rendering as ½.

The reduced size of this symbol may make it illegible to readers with relatively mild visual impairment; consequently the decomposed forms 1⁄2 or ⁠1/2⁠ may be more appropriate.

See also

Postal stamp, Ireland, 1940: one halfpenny postage due.

References

Fractions and ratios
Division and ratio The ratio of width to height of standard-definition television.
Fraction
  • ⁠Numerator/Denominator⁠ = Quotient
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