What is that indicator/math symbol?

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Arup Biswas
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Some sort of hazziness inside a circle ..name of that??
 

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fresh_42 said:
And it's only made to let English native speakers look bad, as it is no "th" but pronounced as "teta", and of course with an "eh", not an "e". :-p

Err, what?
 
fresh_42 said:
Ancient Greek: θῆτα thē̂ta [tʰɛ̂ːta]

Oh, you're just saying it was originally pronounced differently than we do now.
 
Isberg and Resnick really confuses me [emoji24] He could use beta,gamma or anything, instead of this uppercase theta [emoji26]
 
As this is in the context of radioactivity, alpha beta or gamma would be a problematic choice, and you probably want to keep delta for delta-electrons as well. ##\theta## for angles is quite common,no idea why that text uses ##\Theta##.
 
Drakkith said:
Oh, you're just saying it was originally pronounced differently than we do now.
Yes, but whether one pronounces it in modern Greek, with an "[ i ]" or in ancient Greek with an "[ e ]", the "th" is wrong, as it is the Greek version of a "t" which is pronounced as a "t". Perhaps I should start and say the Steelers are from Pittsborough ...
Edit: I might have been wrong here, as the Greek have a sound [##t^h##] which is closer to "th" than to "t", something as in "theft". I had forgotten that there is also the ##\tau## for "t".
TeethWhitener said:
The Greek-Americans that I asked pronounce it "thita," rhyming with "pita" but enunciating the t.
Yes, but modern Greek is a bit different from the ancient language.
 
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Arup Biswas said:
Isberg and Resnick really confuses me [emoji24] He could use beta,gamma or anything, instead of this uppercase theta [emoji26]
We usually loot every alphabet we can get a hand on ##a,b,c,\ldots , \alpha,\beta,\gamma,\ldots , \mathfrak{a},\mathfrak{g},\mathfrak{h},\ldots, \mathbb{C},\mathbb{F},\mathbb{N},\ldots ,\mathcal{A},\mathcal{B},\mathcal{C},\ldots , \mathscr{A},\mathscr{B},\mathscr{C}##
that it makes me wonder why we don't use и , я , ч , etc.
 
fresh_42 said:
We usually loot every alphabet we can get a hand on ##a,b,c,\ldots , \alpha,\beta,\gamma,\ldots , \mathfrak{a},\mathfrak{g},\mathfrak{h},\ldots, \mathbb{C},\mathbb{F},\mathbb{N},\ldots ,\mathcal{A},\mathcal{B},\mathcal{C},\ldots , \mathscr{A},\mathscr{B},\mathscr{C}##
that it makes me wonder why we don't use и , я , ч , etc.
Don't forget the Hebrew letter aleph (##\aleph##), as in ##\aleph_0, \aleph_1## and so on.
 
Arabic has some interesting letters. Too many important symbols have a wide variety of meanings