Mu (letter)

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Template:Short description Template:Other uses Template:Dist Template:Redirect Template:Greek Alphabet

Mu (Template:IPAc-en;[1][2] uppercase Μ, lowercase μ; Ancient Greek Template:Lang Template:IPA, Template:Langx or μυ—both Template:IPA) is the twelfth letter of the Greek alphabet, representing the voiced bilabial nasal Template:IPA. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 40.[3] Mu was derived from the Egyptian hieroglyphic symbol for water, which had been simplified by the Phoenicians and named after their word for water, to become 𐤌Template:Ref (mem). Letters that derive from mu include the Roman M and the Cyrillic М, though the lowercase resembles a small Latin U (u).

Greek letter mu

Names

Ancient Greek

In Greek, the name of the letter was written Template:Lang and pronounced Template:IPA.

Modern Greek

In Modern Greek, the letter is spelled Template:Lang and pronounced Template:IPA. In polytonic orthography, it is written with an acute accentTemplate:Lang.[4][5]

Use as symbol

The lowercase letter mu (μ) is used as a special symbol in many academic fields. Uppercase mu is not used, because it appears identical to Latin M.

Prefix for units of measurement

"μ" is used as a unit prefix denoting a factor of 10−6 (one millionth), in this context, the symbol's name is "micro".

Mathematics

"μ" is conventionally used to denote certain things; however, any Greek letter or other symbol may be used freely as a variable name.

Physics and engineering

In classical physics and engineering:

In particle physics:

In thermodynamics:

Computer science

In evolutionary algorithms:

  • μ, population size from which in each generation λ offspring will generate (the terms μ and λ originate from evolution strategy notation)

In type theory:

  • Used to introduce a recursive data type. For example, list(τ)=μα.1+τα is the type of lists with elements of type τ (a type variable): a sum of unit, representing Template:Mono, with a pair of a τ and another list(τ) (represented by α). In this notation, μ is a binding form, where the variable (α) introduced by μ is bound within the following term (1+τα) to the term itself. Via substitution and arithmetic, the type expands to 1+τ+τ2+τ3+, an infinite sum of ever-increasing products of τ (that is, a τ list is any k-tuple of values of type τ for any k0). Another way to express the same type is list(τ)=1+τlist(τ).

Chemistry

In chemistry:

Biology

In biology:

Pharmacology

In pharmacology:

Orbital mechanics

In orbital mechanics:

Music

  • Mu chord
  • Electronic musician Mike Paradinas runs the label Planet Mu which utilizes the letter as its logo, and releases music under the pseudonym μ-Ziq, pronounced "music"
  • Used as the name of the school idol group μ's, pronounced "muse", consisting of nine singing idols in the anime Love Live! School Idol Project
  • Official fandom name of Kpop group f(x), appearing as either MeU or 'μ'
  • Hip-hop artist Muonboy has taken inspiration from the particle for his stage name and his first EP named Mu uses the letter as its title.

Cameras

The Olympus Corporation manufactures a series of digital cameras called Olympus μ Template:IPA[20] (known as Olympus Stylus in North America).

Linguistics

In phonology:

In syntax:

  • μP (mu phrase) can be used as the name for a functional projection.[21]

In Celtic linguistics:

Unicode

The lowercase mu (as "micro sign") appeared at Template:Tt in the 8-bit ISO-8859-1 encoding, from which Unicode and many other encodings inherited it. It was also at Template:Tt in the popular CP437 on the IBM PC. Unicode has declared that a "real" mu is different than the micro sign.[22]Template:Failed verification

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See also

Template:Wiktionary

References

Template:Reflist