Tau

Greek alphabet
Αα Alpha Νν Nu
Ββ Beta Ξξ Xi
Γγ Gamma Οο Omicron
Δδ Delta Ππ Pi
Εε Epsilon Ρρ Rho
Ζζ Zeta Σσς Sigma
Ηη Eta Ττ Tau
Θθ Theta Υυ Upsilon
Ιι Iota Φφ Phi
Κκ Kappa Χχ Chi
Λλ Lambda Ψψ Psi
Μμ Mu Ωω Omega
History
Archaic local variants
 Â·  Â·  Â·  Â·  Â·
Ligatures (ϛ, È£, ϗ) Â· Diacritics
Numerals: (6) Â· (90) Â· (900)
In other languages
Bactrian  Â· Coptic  Â· Albanian
Scientific symbols

Book  Â· Category Â· Commons

Tau (uppercase Τ, lowercase τ; Greek: ταυ [ˈtaf]) is the 19th letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 300.

The name in English is pronounced /ˈtaʊ/, but in modern Greek it is [ˈtaf]. This is because the pronunciation of the combination of Greek letters αυ has changed from ancient to modern times from one of [au] to either [av] or [af], depending on what follows (see Greek orthography).

Letters that arose from tau include Roman T and Cyrillic Te (Т, τ).

The letter occupies the Unicode slots U+03C4 (lowercase) and U+03A4 (uppercase). In HTML, they can be produced with named entities (τ and Τ), decimal references (τ and Τ), or hexadecimal references (τ and Τ).

Contents

Modern usage

The lower-case letter τ is used as a symbol for:

Mathematics

Physics

Biology

Other

Symbolism

References