Some Common Mathematical Symbols and Abbreviations (With History)
Some Common Mathematical Symbols and Abbreviations (With History)
Some Common Mathematical Symbols and Abbreviations (With History)
Binary Relations
= (the equals sign) means is the same as and was rst introduced in the 1557 book The Whetstone of Witte by Robert Recorde (c. 1510-1558). He wrote, I will sette as I doe often in woorke use, a paire of parralles, or Gemowe lines of one lengthe, thus : ==, bicause noe 2, thynges, can be moare equalle. (Recorde used an elongated form of the modern equals sign.) < (the less than sign) mean is strictly less than, and > (the greater than sign) means is strictly greater than. They rst appeared in Artis Analyticae Praxis ad Aequationes Algebraicas Resolvendas (The Analytical Arts Applied to Solving Algebraic Equations) by Thomas Harriot (1560-1621), which was published posthumously in 1631. Pierre Bouguer (1698-1758) later rened these to (less than or equals) and (greater than or equals) in 1734. . = (the approximately equals sign) means is nearly equal to and was rst used in 1875 by Anton Steinhauser (1802-1890) in his Lehrbuch der Mathematik. (The same symbol was used in 1832 by Wolfgang Bolyai (1775-1856) to signify absolute equality, but the modern symbol for absolute equality is now either or :=, depending on the context.) Other modern symbols for approximately equals include (read: is approximately equal to), = (read: is congruent to), (read: is similar to), (read: is asymptotically equal to), and (read: is proportional to). Usage varies, but typically they are used to denote varying degrees of being approximately equal.
(the i sign) means if and only if and is used to connect logically equivalent statements. (E.g., its raining i its really humid means simultaneously that if its raining, then its really humid and that if its really humid, then its raining. In other words, the statement its raining implies the statement its really humid and vice versa.) This notation i is attributed to the great mathematician Paul R. Halmos (1916 ). (the universal quantier symbol) means for all and was rst used in the 1935 publication Untersuchungen ueber das logische Schliessen (Investigations on Logical Reasoning) by Gerhard Gentzen (1909-1945). He called it the All-Zeichen (all character), in analogy with (read: there exists). (the existential quantier) means there exists and was rst used in the 1897 book Formulaire de mathematiqus by Giuseppe Peano (1858-1932). (the Halmos tombstone) means QED, which is an abbreviation for the Latin phrase quod erat demonstrandum (which was to be proven). QED has been the most common way to symbolize the end of a logical argument for many centuries, but the modern convention in mathematics is to use the tombstone in place of QED. This tombstone notation is attributed to the great mathematician Paul R. Halmos (1916 ).
The very famous mathematician Edmund Landau (1877-1938) once wrote that The letter e may now no longer be used to denote anything other than this positive universal constant.
1 ln n) (the Euler-Mascheroni constant) denotes the number 0.577215664901 . . ., = limn ( k=1 k and was rst used by Lorenzo Mascheroni (1750-1800) in his 1792 Adnotationes ad Euleri Calculum Integralem (Annotations to Eulers Integral Calculus). n
The number is usually considered to be the third most important important non-basic number in mathematics, following closely and e. 1 = 2 (1 + 5) (the golden ratio) denotes the number 1.618033988749 . . .. Its use was rst attributed to the American Mathematician Mr. Mark Barr in The Curves of Life: Being an Account of Spiral Formations and Their Application to Growth in Nature, to Science, and to Art: With Special Reference to the Manuscripts of Leonardo da Vinci (1914) by Sir Theodore Andrea Cook (1867-1928): The symbol was given to this proportion partly because it has a familiar sound to those who wrestle constantly with and partly because it is the 1st letter of the name of Pheidias, in whose sculpture this number is seen to prevail when the distance between salient points are measured. i = 1 (the imaginary unit) was rst used by Leonhard Euler (1707-1783) in his 1777 memoir Institutionum calculi integralis (Foundations of Integral Calculus).
Some References
1. History of Mathematics Pages by Je Miller. http://members.aol.com/jeff570/ 2. The History of Mathematics website at University of South Australia. http://www.roma.unisa.edu.au/07305 3. Numericana.com website by Gerard Michon. http://www.numericana.com/ 4. The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/ history/ 5. Math Words website by Pat Ballew. http://www.pballew.net/etyindex.html 6. A History of Mathematical Notations by Florian Cajori. Two volumes bound into one (820 page!) volume by Dover Books (doverpublications.com). 3