View Full Version : What is the name of this character?
luitzen
Jun30-11, 08:01 AM
I'm not really sure whether this is the correct place for this question, but I'm gonna ask it anyway.
I've had Latin and Greek classes in high school, but I've never seen this character before. Still, I guess it's an obscure Latin or Greek character, but I don't know it's name. I encountered it in Griffiths where it's used for the momentum of EM-waves.
http://img8.imageshack.us/img8/9220/unknowncharacter.jpg
Ben Niehoff
Jun30-11, 12:47 PM
It's just a fancy cursive P.
In mathematics, it's usually used to mean the power set.
TetraEleven
Jun30-11, 02:11 PM
Golden ratio?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_ratio
Redbelly98
Jun30-11, 07:48 PM
Golden ratio?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_ratio
That's a Greek lowercase "phi". The OP's character looks quite different to me, as it doesn't have the straight-down tail at the bottom like "phi" does.
I think the original poster means the symbol \wp.
I confess I only ever recall seeing the symbol used for the Weierstrass function (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weierstrass's_elliptic_functions) (possibly I've seen it in some fancy cursive script).
Wikipedia has a page on it: Weierstrass p (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weierstrass_p).
A symbol often used for power set is \mathcal{P}.
The fancy phi mentinoed is \varphi.
TetraEleven
Jun30-11, 08:53 PM
That's a Greek lowercase "phi". The OP's character looks quite different to me, as it doesn't have the straight-down tail at the bottom like "phi" does.
I figured they probably weren't the same, but I thought I'd try to help anyway.
Loren Booda
Jun30-11, 09:12 PM
I think the original poster means the symbol \wp.
I confess I only ever recall seeing the symbol used for the Weierstrass function (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weierstrass's_elliptic_functions) (possibly I've seen it in some fancy cursive script).
Wikipedia has a page on it: Weierstrass p (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weierstrass_p).
Way to go, Hurkyl.
That's it, so that means it's a Latin P, right?
Loren Booda
Jul1-11, 10:06 AM
Or German?
No, German doesn't have it's own alphabet, it uses the Latin alphabet. So the question was whether it was a capital rho or pee.
It's not from the German alphabet. It's a character created by the German mathematician Karl Weierstrass.
We already established that 3 days ago. German does not have an alphabet. I was asking whether it is a Latin pee or Greek rho.
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