Psi (Greek)

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Psi /ˈ(p)s, ˈ(p)s/ (P)SY, (P)SEE[1] (uppercase Ψ, lowercase ψ or 𝛙; Greek: ψι psi [ˈpsi]) is the twenty-third and penultimate letter of the Greek alphabet and is associated with a numeric value of 700. In both Classical and Modern Greek, the letter indicates the combination /ps/ (as in English word "lapse").

The Greek alphabet on a black-figure pottery vessel, with an archaic chickenfoot-shaped psi.

For Greek loanwords in Latin and modern languages with Latin alphabets, psi is usually transliterated as "ps".

The letter's origin is uncertain. It may or may not derive from the Phoenician alphabet. It appears in the 7th century BC, expressing /ps/ in the Eastern alphabets, but /kʰ/ in the Western alphabets (the sound expressed by Χ in the Eastern alphabets). In writing, the early letter appears in an angular shape (). There were early graphical variants that omitted the stem ("chickenfoot-shaped psi" as: or ).[citation needed]

The Western letter (expressing /kʰ/, later /x/) was adopted into the Old Italic alphabets, and its shape is also continued into the Algiz rune <ᛉ> of the Elder Futhark.

Psi, or its Arcadian variant or was adopted in the Latin alphabet in the form of "Antisigma" (Ↄ, ↃC, or 𐌟) during the reign of Emperor Claudius as one of the three Claudian letters.[2] However, it was abandoned after his death.[citation needed]

The classical Greek letter was adopted into the early Cyrillic alphabet as "Ѱ".

Use as a symbol

The letter psi is commonly used in physics to represent wave functions in quantum mechanics, such as in the Schrödinger equation and bra–ket notation:  . It is also used to represent the (generalized) positional states of a qubit in a quantum computer.

Psi is also used as the symbol for the polygamma function, defined by

 

where   is the gamma function.

The letters Ψ or ψ can also be a symbol for:

Unicode

  • U+03A8 Ψ GREEK CAPITAL LETTER PSI (&Psi;)[7]
  • U+03C8 ψ GREEK SMALL LETTER PSI (&psi;)
  • U+0470 Ѱ CYRILLIC CAPITAL LETTER PSI
  • U+0471 ѱ CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER PSI
  • U+1D2A GREEK LETTER SMALL CAPITAL PSI
  • U+2CAE COPTIC CAPITAL LETTER PSI
  • U+2CAF COPTIC SMALL LETTER PSI
  • U+1D6BF 𝚿 MATHEMATICAL BOLD CAPITAL PSI[a]
  • U+1D6D9 𝛙 MATHEMATICAL BOLD SMALL PSI
  • U+1D6F9 𝛹 MATHEMATICAL ITALIC CAPITAL PSI
  • U+1D713 𝜓 MATHEMATICAL ITALIC SMALL PSI
  • U+1D733 𝜳 MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL PSI
  • U+1D74D 𝝍 MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC SMALL PSI
  • U+1D76D 𝝭 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD CAPITAL PSI
  • U+1D787 𝞇 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD SMALL PSI
  • U+1D7A7 𝞧 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL PSI
  • U+1D7C1 𝟁 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC SMALL PSI
  1. ^ The MATHEMATICAL characters are used in math. Stylized Greek text should be encoded using the normal Greek letters, with markup and formatting to indicate text style.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ "psi". The Chambers Dictionary (9th ed.). Chambers. 2003. ISBN 0-550-10105-5.
  2. ^ Oliver, Revilo P. (1949). "The Claudian Letter Ⱶ". American Journal of Archaeology. 53 (3): 249–257. doi:10.2307/500662. JSTOR 500662. S2CID 193082268.
  3. ^ IUPAC-IUB Commission on Biochemical Nomenclature (1970). "Abbreviations and symbols for nucleic acids, polynucleotides, and their constituents". Biochemistry. 9 (20): 4022–4027. doi:10.1021/bi00822a023.
  4. ^ Although the university itself refers to its logo as a trident, not the Greek letter psi: "The IU trident—the only logo at Indiana University". Indiana University. Retrieved 2020-07-31. At IU, the trident is the only logo we use, both institution-wide and at the unit level.
  5. ^ Buchholz, W. (1986). "A new System of proof-theoretic ordinal functions" (PDF). Ann. Pure Appl. Logic. 32 (3): 195–207. doi:10.1016/0168-0072(86)90052-7.
  6. ^ Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar
  7. ^ Unicode Code Charts: Greek and Coptic (Range: 0370-03FF)