Mu (;[1] uppercase Μ, lowercase μ; Ancient Greek Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: μῦ in Greek, Modern (1453-); pronounced as /mŷː/, el|μι or μυ—both in Greek, Modern (1453-); pronounced as /mi/) is the twelfth letter of the Greek alphabet, representing the voiced bilabial nasal in Greek, Modern (1453-); pronounced as /m/. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 40.[2] 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 (mem). Letters that derive from mu include the Roman M and the Cyrillic М, though the lowercase resembles a small Latin U (u).
In Greek, the name of the letter was written Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: μῦ and pronounced pronounced as /[mŷː]/.
In Modern Greek, the letter is spelled Greek, Modern (1453-);: μι and pronounced in Greek, Modern (1453-); pronounced as /mi/. In polytonic orthography, it is written with an acute accent: Greek, Modern (1453-);: μί.[3] [4]
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.
"μ" is used as a unit prefix denoting a factor of 10−6 (one millionth), in this context, the symbol's name is "micro".
"μ" is conventionally used to denote certain things; however, any Greek letter or other symbol may be used freely as a variable name.
In classical physics and engineering:
In particle physics:
In thermodynamics:
In type theory:
list(\tau)=\mu{}\alpha{}.1+\tau{}\alpha
\tau
\tau
list(\tau)
\alpha
\mu
\alpha
\mu
1+\tau{}\alpha
1+\tau+\tau2+\tau3+ …
\tau
\tau{}list
k
\tau
k\ge0
list(\tau)=1+\tau{}list(\tau)
In chemistry:
In biology:
In pharmacology:
The Olympus Corporation manufactures a series of digital cameras called Olympus μ pronounced as /[mju:]/[8] (known as Olympus Stylus in North America).
In phonology:
In syntax:
In Celtic linguistics:
The lower-case mu (as "micro sign") appeared at in the 8-bit ISO-8859-1 encoding, from which Unicode and many other encodings inherited it. It was also at in the popular CP437 on the IBM PC. Unicode has declared that a "real" mu is different than the micro sign.[10]
These are only to be used for mathematical text, not for text styling: