I am looking for a reference for the following fact: The orthogonal group $O_{2n}$ over an algebraically closed field of characteristic 2 has exactly two connected components.
To be more precise, let $O_q$ denote the orthogonal group of the quadratic form $q(x)=x_1 x_2 +x_3 x_4+\cdots +x_{2n-1}x_{2n}$ over an algebraically closed field $k$. In characteristic $p\neq 2$ the determinant takes two values on $O_q$, 1 and $-1$, and therefore the subgroup $SO_q:=O_q\cap SL_{2n}$ is of index 2 in $O_q$; it is known that $O_q\cap SL_{2n}$ is connected.
In characteristic 2 the determinant takes only one value 1 on $O_q$ (because $-1=1$), and therefore $O_q\cap SL_{2n}=O_q$. Still there is a homomorphism $D\colon O_q\to \mathbf{Z}/2\mathbf{Z}$ given by a polynomial $D$ called the Dickson invariant, see J.A.~Dieudonn\'e, Pseudo-discriminant and Dickson invariant, Pacific. J. Math. 5 (1955), 907--910. This homomorphism $D$ indeed takes both values 0 and 1 on $O_q$, and therefore its kernel ker $D$ is a closed subgroup of index 2 in $O_q$. I would like to know that ker $D$ is connected. In other words, I am looking for a reference to the assertion that the orthogonal group $O_q$ has at most two connected components. This is proved in Brian Conrad's handout "Properties of orthogonal groups" to his course Math 252 "Algebraic groups", see http://math.stanford.edu/~conrad/252Page/handouts/O(q).pdf . Is there any other reference for this fact?
I will be grateful to any references, comments, etc.
Mikhail Borovoi