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For other uses, see Phi.
Phi (uppercase Φ, lowercase φ or math symbol ϕ), pronounced [ˈfi] in modern Greek and /ˈfaɪ/ or sometimes /ˈfiː/ in English,[1] is the 21st letter of the Greek alphabet. In modern Greek, it represents [f], a voiceless labiodental fricative. In Ancient Greek it represented [pʰ], an aspirated voiceless bilabial plosive (from which English ultimately inherits the spelling "ph" in words derived from Greek). In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 500 (φʹ) or 500,000 (͵φ). The Cyrillic letter Ef (Ф, ф) arose from phi. In economics, this Greek symbol is usually an additive term.[clarification needed]
[edit] Use as a symbolThe lower-case letter
The upper-case letter Φ is used as a symbol for:
The diameter symbol in engineering, ⌀, is often incorrectly referred to as "phi". This symbol is used to indicate the diameter of a circular section, for example "⌀14", means the diameter of the circle is 14 units. [edit] ComputingIn Unicode, there are multiple forms of the phi letter:
In some older fonts that are not yet compatible with Unicode 3.0 from 1998, the U+03D5 GREEK PHI SYMBOL might be represented by the "loopy" In HTML/XHTML, the upper and lower case phi character entity references are Φ (Φ) and φ (φ) respectively. In LaTeX, the math symbols are \Phi ( [edit] See also[edit] References
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