Formula symbol

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DIN 1304 part 1-8
title Formula symbol
Regulates Formula symbols, formula set
1: 1994 General formula symbols
2: 1989 Meteorology and geophysics
3: 2006 Generation, transport and distribution of electrical energy
5: 1989 Fluid mechanics
6: 1992 Electrical communications engineering
7: 1991 Electrical machines
8: 1994 Converters with semiconductor components
Publishing year from 1989

Formula symbols (also: size symbols ) are symbols that are used to denote physical quantities . According to DIN 1304 ("Formula symbol") and ISO / IEC 80000 ("Sizes and units"), a formula symbol consists of a basic symbol and, if necessary, of subsidiary symbols, e.g. B. Indices . The basic characters are Latin and Greek upper and lower case letters. Subsidiary characters are letters, numbers or special characters (e.g. *, ', ~, ^). Basic characters consisting of several letters are not permitted, except for parameters ( sizes of the dimension number ) such as B. the Reynolds number .

The formula symbols are occasionally based on English or Latin technical terms. For example, a force is often referred to by the symbol , which is derived from the English force or the Latin fortitudo .

In accordance with DIN 1304 and DIN 1313 ("sizes"), the basic characters must be set in italics in print . DIN 1338 ("Formula notation and typesetting") recommends a font with serifs . Such a font prevents, for example, the confusion of the capital I ( ) with the small l ( ).

Application examples

means: The electrical resistance is equal to the electrical voltage divided by the electrical current strength .
means: The energy is equal to the mass times the square of the speed of light .

Formula symbols can only consist of one basic symbol - as shown in the previous examples - or they can contain additional symbols to further define the size. Examples of electrical voltage are:

: AC and DC components of a voltage
: Peak value and rms value for sinusoidal alternating voltage
: Real part in complex notation

Frequently used special characters in connection with formula symbols

meaning presentation example
Unit of measurement of a size square brackets around the symbol of the relevant size
Peak value Circumflex, "roof"
amount Amount bars
Average Overline
Expected value angle brackets
Quantity transformed into another frame of reference apostrophe
first (second) derivative according to location one (two) apostrophe (s)
first (second) derivative with respect to time one (two) point (s) above the symbol
complex conjugation superscript asterisk
Vectors Arrow or bold face
Matrices Underline or bold type
Transposition superscript "T"
Adjoint superscript cross

See also

swell