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Phi

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Phi /ˈf/[1] (uppercase Φ, lowercase φ or ϕ; Ancient Greek: ϕεῖ pheî [pʰé͜e]; Modern Greek φι fi [fi]) is the 21st letter of the Greek alphabet.

In Archaic and Classical Greek (c. 9th century BC to 4th century BC), it represented an aspirated voiceless bilabial plosive ([pʰ]), which was the origin of its usual romanization as ⟨ph⟩. During the later part of Classical Antiquity, in Koine Greek (c. 4th century BC to 4th century AD), its pronunciation shifted to that of a voiceless bilabial fricative ([ɸ]), and by the Byzantine Greek period (c. 4th century AD to 15th century AD) it developed its modern pronunciation as a voiceless labiodental fricative ([f]). The romanization of the Modern Greek phoneme is therefore usually ⟨f⟩.

It may be that phi originated as the letter qoppa, and initially represented the sound /kʷʰ/ before shifting to Classical Greek [pʰ].[2] In traditional Greek numerals, phi has a value of 500 (φʹ) or 500,000 (͵φ). The Cyrillic letter Ef (Ф, ф) descends from phi.

As with other Greek letters, lowercase phi is used as a mathematical or scientific symbol. Some uses, such as the golden ratio, require the old-fashioned 'closed' glyph, which is separately encoded as the Unicode character U+03D5 ϕ GREEK PHI SYMBOL.

Use as a symbol

The lowercase letter φ (or often its variant, ϕ) is often used to represent the following:

The uppercase letter Φ is used as a symbol for:

The diameter symbol in engineering, , is often erroneously referred to as "phi", and the diameter symbol is sometimes erroneously typeset as Φ. This symbol is used to indicate the diameter of a circular section; for example, "⌀14" means the diameter of the circle is 14 units.

Computing

In Unicode, there are multiple forms of the phi letter:

Character Name Correct appearance Your browser Usage
U+03A6 GREEK CAPITAL LETTER PHI Φ Used in Greek texts
U+03C6 GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI or φ Used in Greek texts
U+03D5 GREEK PHI SYMBOL ϕ (ϕ) Used in mathematical and technical contexts.[8] (Italicized.)
U+0278 LATIN SMALL LETTER PHI ɸ Used in IPA to symbolise a voiceless bilabial fricative

In ordinary Greek text, the character U+03C6 φ is used exclusively, although this character has considerable glyphic variation, sometimes represented with a glyph more like the representative glyph shown for U+03C6 (φ, the "loopy" or "open" form), and less often with a glyph more like the representative glyph shown for U+03D5 (ϕ, the "stroked" or "closed" form). Unicode makes an effort to distinguish the two by generally calling the loopy form "small letter phi" or "small phi", and by calling the stroked form "phi symbol", but this isn't exclusively true on all variants.

Because Unicode represents a character in an abstract way, the choice between glyphs is purely a matter of font design. While some Greek typefaces, most notably those in the Porson family (used widely in editions of classical Greek texts), have a "stroked" glyph in this position (), most other typefaces have "loopy" glyphs. This also applies to the "Didot" (or "apla") typefaces employed in most Greek book printing (), as well as the "Neohellenic" typeface often used for ancient texts ().

It is necessary to have the stroked glyph available for some mathematical uses, and U+03D5 GREEK PHI SYMBOL is designed for this function. Prior to Unicode version 3.0 (1998), the glyph assignments in the Unicode code charts were the reverse, and thus older fonts may still show a loopy form at U+03D5.[8]

For use as a phonetic symbol in IPA, Unicode has a separate code point U+0278, LATIN SMALL LETTER PHI, because only the stroked glyph is considered correct in this use. It typically appears in a form adapted to a Latin typographic environment, with a more upright shape than normal Greek letters and with serifs at the top and bottom.

In HTML/XHTML, the upper- and lowercase phi character entity references are Φ (Φ) and φ (φ), respectively.

In LaTeX, the math symbols are \Phi (), \phi (), and \varphi ().

The Unicode standard also includes the following variants of phi and phi-like characters:

Character Name Appearance
U+1D60 MODIFIER LETTER SMALL GREEK PHI
U+1D69 GREEK SUBSCRIPT SMALL LETTER PHI
U+1DB2 MODIFIER LETTER SMALL PHI
U+2CAA COPTIC CAPITAL LETTER FI
U+2CAB COPTIC SMALL LETTER FI
U+2C77 LATIN SMALL LETTER TAILLESS PHI
U+1D6BD MATHEMATICAL BOLD CAPITAL PHI 𝚽
U+1D6D7 MATHEMATICAL BOLD SMALL PHI 𝛗
U+1D6DF MATHEMATICAL BOLD PHI SYMBOL 𝛟
U+1D6F7 MATHEMATICAL ITALIC CAPITAL PHI 𝛷
U+1D711 MATHEMATICAL ITALIC SMALL PHI 𝜑
U+1D719 MATHEMATICAL ITALIC PHI SYMBOL 𝜙
U+1D731 MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL PHI 𝜱
U+1D74B MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC SMALL PHI 𝝋
U+1D753 MATHEMATICAL BOLD ITALIC PHI SYMBOL 𝝓
U+1D76B MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD CAPITAL PHI 𝝫
U+1D785 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD SMALL PHI 𝞅
U+1D78D MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD PHI SYMBOL 𝞍
U+1D7A5 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC CAPITAL PHI 𝞥
U+1D7BF MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC SMALL PHI 𝞿
U+1D7C7 MATHEMATICAL SANS-SERIF BOLD ITALIC PHI SYMBOL 𝟇

See also

References

  1. ^ "phi". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ Brixhe, C. "History of the Alphabet", in Christidēs & al.'s A History of Ancient Greek. 2007.
  3. ^ "Compendium of Mathematical Symbols". Math Vault. 2020-03-01. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  4. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Golden Ratio". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Greek/Hebrew/Latin-based Symbols in Mathematics". Math Vault. 2020-03-20. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  6. ^ "Euler's Totient Function | Brilliant Math & Science Wiki". brilliant.org. Retrieved 2020-08-10.
  7. ^ Evans, Dylans (1996). An introductory dictionary of Lacanian psychoanalysis. Routledge. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-415-13523-8.
  8. ^ a b "Representative Glyphs for Greek Phi". UTR #25: Unicode support for mathematics (PDF).
  • The dictionary definition of φ at Wiktionary