Latin letters used in mathematics, science, and engineering

Many letters of the Latin alphabet, both capital and small, are used in mathematics, science, and engineering to denote by convention specific or abstracted constants, variables of a certain type, units, multipliers, or physical entities. Certain letters, when combined with special formatting, take on special meaning.

Below is an alphabetical list of the letters of the alphabet with some of their uses. The field in which the convention applies is mathematics unless otherwise noted.

Typographical variation

Some common conventions:

Aa

Bb

Cc

Dd

Ee

Ff

Gg

Hh

Ii

  • i represents:
    • the imaginary unit, a complex number that is the square root of −1
    • Imaginary quaternion unit
    • a subscript to denote the ith term (that is, a general term or index) in a sequence or list
    • the index to the elements of a vector, written as a subscript after the vector name
    • the index to the rows of a matrix, written as the first subscript after the matrix name
    • an index of summation using the sigma notation
    • the unit vector in Cartesian coordinates going in the x-direction, usually bold i

Jj

Kk

Ll

Mm

Nn

Oo

Pp

Qq

Rr

Ss

Tt

Uu

Vv

Ww

Xx

Yy

Zz

See also

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Latin letters used in mathematics, science, and engineering, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.