Safer outs in darts The object of the game of
darts is to reach a score of 0, so the player with the smaller score is in a better position to win. At the beginning of a leg, "smaller" has the usual meaning of
absolute value, and the basic strategy is to aim at high-value areas on the dartboard and score as many points as possible. At the end of a leg, since one needs to double out to win, the 2-adic absolute value becomes the relevant measure. With any odd score no matter how small in absolute value, it takes at least two darts to win. Any even score between 2 and 40 can be satisfied with a single dart, and 40 is a much more desirable score than 2, due to the effects of missing. A common miss when aiming at the double ring is to hit a single instead and accidentally halve one's score. Given a score of 22 — a singly even number — one has a game shot for double 11. If one hits single 11, the new score is 11, which is odd, and it will take at least two further darts to recover. By contrast, when shooting for double 12, one may make the same mistake but still have 3 game shots in a row: D12, D6, and D3. Generally, with a score of , one has such game shots. This is why is such a desirable score: it splits 5 times.
Irrationality of the square root of 2 The classic proof that the
square root of 2 is
irrational operates by
infinite descent. Usually, the descent part of the proof is abstracted away by assuming (or proving) the existence of
irreducible representations of
rational numbers. An alternate approach is to exploit the existence of the ν2 operator.
Assume by contradiction that :\sqrt 2 = \frac a b, where
a and
b are non-zero natural numbers. Square both sides of the equality and apply the 2-order valuation operator ν2 to : :\nu_2\left(2b^2\right) = \nu_2\left(a^2\right) :\nu_2\left(b^2\right) + 1 = \nu_2\left(a^2\right) :2\nu_2(b) + 1 = 2\nu_2(a) :\nu_2(a) - \nu_2(b) = \frac 1 2 Since 2-order valuations are integers, the difference cannot be equal to the rational \frac 1 2. By contradiction, therefore, is not a rational. More concretely, since the valuation of 2
b2 is odd, while valuation of
a2 is even, they must be distinct integers, so that \left|2 b^2 - a^2\right| \geq 1. An easy calculation then yields a lower bound of \frac{1}{3b^2} for the difference \left|\sqrt 2 - a / b \right|, yielding a direct proof of irrationality not relying on the
law of excluded middle.
Geometric topology In
geometric topology, many properties of manifolds depend only on their dimension mod 4 or mod 8; thus one often studies manifolds of singly even and doubly even dimension (4
k+2 and 4
k) as classes. For example, doubly even-dimensional manifolds have a
symmetric nondegenerate bilinear form on their middle-dimension
cohomology group, which thus has an integer-valued
signature. Conversely, singly even-dimensional manifolds have a
skew-symmetric nondegenerate bilinear form on their middle dimension; if one defines a
quadratic refinement of this to a
quadratic form (as on a
framed manifold), one obtains the
Arf invariant as a mod 2 invariant. Odd-dimensional manifolds, by contrast, do not have these invariants, though in
algebraic surgery theory one may define more complicated invariants. This 4-fold and 8-fold periodicity in the structure of manifolds is related to the 4-fold periodicity of
L-theory and the 8-fold periodicity of real
topological K-theory, which is known as
Bott periodicity. If a
compact oriented smooth spin manifold has dimension , or exactly, then its
signature is an integer multiple of 16.
Other appearances A singly even number cannot be a
powerful number. It cannot be represented as a
difference of two squares. However, a singly even number can be represented as the difference of two
pronic numbers or of two powerful numbers. In
group theory, it is relatively simple to show that the order of a
nonabelian finite simple group cannot be a singly even number. In fact, by the
Feit–Thompson theorem, it cannot be odd either, so every such group has doubly even order.
Lambert's continued fraction for the
tangent function gives the following
simple continued fraction involving the positive singly even numbers: :\tanh \frac{1}{2} = \frac{e - 1}{e + 1} = 0 + \cfrac{1}{2 + \cfrac{1}{6 + \cfrac{1}{10 + \cfrac{1}{14 + \cfrac{1}{\ddots}}}}} This expression leads to similar
representations of. In
organic chemistry,
Hückel's rule, also known as the 4n + 2 rule, predicts that a
cyclic π-bond system containing a singly even number of
p electrons will be
aromatic. ==Related classifications==