بيتا (حرف إغريقي)

(تم التحويل من Beta (letter))

{{Hatnote group|

Beta uc lc.svg
الأبجدية اليونانية
Αα ألفا Νν نو
Ββ بيتا Ξξ Xi
Γγ گاما Οο اوميكرون
Δδ دلتا Ππ پاي
Εε Epsilon Ρρ Rho
Ζζ زيتا Σσς سيگما
Ηη إيتا Ττ تاو
Θθ ثيتا Υυ Upsilon
Ιι إيوتا Φφ في
Κκ كاپا Χχ Chi
Λλ لامبدا Ψψ پسي
Μμ مو Ωω اوميگا
التاريخ
المتغيرات المحلية القديمة
  • ديگاما
  • هيتا
  • سان
  • كوپا
  • سامپي
  • تسان
الترقيم
Greek letter Stigma.svg (6)
Greek Koppa lamedh-shaped.svg (90)
Sampi.svg (900)
في لغات أخرى
الرموز العلمية

بيتا (باليونانية:βῆτα) هو الحرف الثاني في الأبجدية الإغريقية, يأخذ الحرف شكلين الكبير (Β) والصغير (β). In the system of Greek numerals, it has a value of 2. In Ancient Greek, beta represented the voiced bilabial plosive أ.ص.د.: [b]. In Modern Greek, it represents the voiced bilabial fricative أ.ص.د.: [β] while أ.ص.د.: [b] in borrowed words is instead commonly transcribed as μπ.[1][2] Letters that arose from beta include the Roman letter B and the Cyrillic letters Б and В.

وفى حقل الفلك يشير هذا الحرف الى النجم الثاني من حيث السطوع في كوكبة من كوكبات السماء ومثاله بيتا الجبار وهو (رجل الجبار)

Name

Like the names of most other Greek letters, the name of beta comes from the acrophonic name of the corresponding letter in Phoenician, which was the common Semitic word *bayt ('house', compare عربية: بيت bayt and عبرية: בית báyit). In Greek, the name was βῆτα bêta, pronounced [bɛ̂ːta] in Ancient Greek. It is spelled βήτα in modern monotonic orthography and pronounced [ˈvita].

History

The letter beta was derived from the Phoenician letter beth Beth.

The letter Β had the largest number of highly divergent local forms. Besides the standard form (either rounded or pointed, Greek Beta 16.svg), there were forms as varied as Greek Beta 12.svg (Gortyn), Greek Beta 01.svg and Greek Beta 10.svg (Thera), Greek Beta 03.svg (Argos), Greek Beta 05.svg (Melos), Greek Beta Corinth 1.svg (Corinth), Greek Beta Byzantium 1.svg (Megara, Byzantium), and Greek Gamma C-shaped.svg (Cyclades).[3]

Typography

In some high-quality typesetting, especially in the French tradition, a typographic variant of the lowercase letter without a descender is used within a word for ancient Greek: βίβλος is printed βίϐ [ك‍]λος.[4]

In typesetting technical literature, it is a commonly made mistake to use the German letter ß (a s–z or s–s ligature) as a replacement for β. The two letters resemble each other in some fonts, but they are unrelated.[5]

Uses

The Greek alphabet on an ancient black figure vessel, with the characteristically angular beta of the time

Algebraic numerals

In the system of Greek numerals, beta has a value of 2. Such use is denoted by a number mark: Β′.

Computing

Finance

Beta is used in finance as a measure of investment portfolio risk.[6]

International Phonetic Alphabet

In the International Phonetic Alphabet, Greek minuscule beta denotes a voiced bilabial fricative [β].[7]

A superscript version may also indicate a compressed vowel, like [ɯᵝ].

Meteorology

Beta has twice been used to name an Atlantic Basin tropical cyclone:

Mathematics and science

  • Beta is often used to denote a variable in mathematics and physics, where it often has specific meanings for certain applications.
  • Some uses of beta in math include:
  • Some uses of beta in physics and engineering include:
    • In spaceflight, beta angle describes the angle between the orbit plane of a spacecraft or other body and the vector from the sun.[10]
    • In physics β is used for a beta particle (an unbound energetic electron or positron).[11]
  • β is also used for naming in biology. For example, e.g. β-Carotene, a primary source of provitamin A; β cells in pancreatic islets, which produce insulin; and beta sheet, a common motif in protein secondary structure.
  • The uppercase letter beta is not generally used as a symbol because it tends to be rendered identically to the uppercase Latin B.

Rock climbing terminology

The term "beta" refers to advice on how to successfully complete a particular climbing route, boulder problem, or crux sequence.[12]

Slang

Beta male, or simply beta, is a slang term for men derived from the designation for beta animals in ethology, along with its counterpart, alpha male.[13][14] The term has been used as a pejorative self-identifier among members of manosphere communities, particularly incels, who do not believe they are assertive or traditionally masculine, and feel overlooked by women.[15][16] It is also used to negatively describe other men who are not assertive, particularly in heterosexual relationships.

Videotape formats

"Beta" can be used to refer to several consumer and professional videotape formats developed by Japan's Sony Corporation. Although similarly named, they are very different in function and obsolescence.

  • Betamax was the name of a domestic videotape format developed in the 1970s and 1980s. It competed with the Video Home System (VHS) format developed by the Japanese Victor Company, to which it eventually succumbed. The Betamax format was also marketed Betacord by (Sanyo); some cassettes were simply labeled "Beta", and the logo was a lower-case beta. Betamax lost in the market and is an oft-used example of a technically superior solution that failed due to market forces.[17]
  • Betacam, including Beta SP and DigiBeta, is a family of professional videotape formats launched in 1982 that was the de facto standard for professional video, advertising, and television production through the 2000s. The formats outlasted analog NTSC television, and their scarcity today is because the industry has moved to HD formats.

Unicode

  • U+0392 Β (HTML Β⧼dot-separator⧽ Β)
  • U+03B2 β (HTML β⧼dot-separator⧽ β) (\beta in TeX)
  • U+03D0 ϐ (HTML ϐ)
  • U+1D5D (HTML ᵝ)
  • U+1D66 (HTML ᵦ)
  • U+1DE9 ◌ᷩ
  • U+2C82 (HTML Ⲃ)
  • U+2C83 (HTML ⲃ)
  • U+333C (HTML ㌼) (Japanese square katakana of ベータ bēta)
  • U+A7B4 (HTML Ꞵ)
  • U+A7B5 (HTML ꞵ)
  • U+10381 𐎁 (HTML 𐎁)

These characters are used only as mathematical symbols. Stylized Greek text should be encoded using the normal Greek letters, with markup and formatting to indicate text style:

  • U+1D6A9 𝚩 (HTML 𝚩)
  • U+1D6C3 𝛃 (HTML 𝛃)
  • U+1D6E3 𝛣 (HTML 𝛣)
  • U+1D6FD 𝛽 (HTML 𝛽)
  • U+1D71D 𝜝 (HTML 𝜝)
  • U+1D737 𝜷 (HTML 𝜷)
  • U+1D757 𝝗 (HTML 𝝗)
  • U+1D771 𝝱 (HTML 𝝱)
  • U+1D791 𝞑 (HTML 𝞑)
  • U+1D7AB 𝞫 (HTML 𝞫)

References

شعار قاموس المعرفة.png
ابحث عن β في
قاموس المعرفة.
  1. ^ "UN Romanization of Greek for Geographical Names (1987)". www.eki.ee. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  2. ^ "Pronouncing the Greek Alphabet". ThoughtCo (in الإنجليزية). Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  3. ^ Jeffery, Lilian Hamilton (1961). The Local Scripts of Archaic Greece. Oxford University Press. p. 23.
  4. ^ Haralambous, Yannis (1999). "From Unicode to typography, a case study: the Greek script" (PDF). p. 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-15.
  5. ^ Aguilar Ruiz, Manuel José (2013). ""Las normas ortográficas y ortotipográficas de la nueva Ortografía de la lengua española (2010) aplicadas a las publicaciones biomédicas en español: una visión de conjunto" (PDF). Panace@. 14 (37): 104.
  6. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Beta". mathworld.wolfram.com (in الإنجليزية). Retrieved 2025-01-22. A financial measure of a fund's sensitivity to market movements which measures the relationship between a fund's excess return over Treasury Bills and the excess return of a benchmark index (which, by definition, has ß=1)
  7. ^ "IPA symbols with Unicode decimal and hex codes". www.internationalphoneticalphabet.org. Retrieved 2025-09-24. β ...vd bilabial fricative
  8. ^ Bhandari, Pritha (2021-01-18). "Type I & Type II Errors | Differences, Examples, Visualizations". Scribbr (in الإنجليزية الأمريكية). Retrieved 2025-01-22. The probability of making a Type I error is the significance level, or alpha (α), while the probability of making a Type II error is beta (β).
  9. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Dirichlet Beta Function". mathworld.wolfram.com (in الإنجليزية). Retrieved 2025-01-31.
  10. ^ "Thermal Operation | The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer Experiment". ams02.space. Retrieved 2025-09-24. The solar beta angle, ß, is the angle between the ISS orbital plane and the solar vector (direction from the Sun to the Earth).
  11. ^ Rutherford, E. (January 1899). "VIII. Uranium radiation and the electrical conduction produced by it". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science (in الإنجليزية). 47 (284): 109–163. doi:10.1080/14786449908621245. ISSN 1941-5982.
  12. ^ Rock and Ice (3 October 2016). "Rock & Ice – Climbing Terminology".
  13. ^ Hawley, P. H.; Little, Todd D.; Card, Noel A. (January 2008). "The myth of the alpha male: A new look at dominance-related beliefs and behaviors among adolescent males and females". International Journal of Behavioral Development. 32 (1): 76–88. doi:10.1177/0165025407084054. S2CID 145156929.
  14. ^ Hosie, Rachel (9 May 2017). "The Myth of the Alpha Male". The Independent.
  15. ^ Jones, Callum; Trott, Verity; Wright, Scott (2020). "Sluts and soyboys: MGTOW and the production of misogynistic online harassment". New Media & Society. 22 (10): 1903–1921. doi:10.1177/1461444819887141. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 210530415.
  16. ^ Nicholas, Lucy; Agius, Christine (2018). The Persistence of Global Masculinism: Discourse, Gender and Neo-Colonial Re-Articulations of Violence. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-68360-7. ISBN 978-3-319-68359-1. LCCN 2017954971. Archived from the original on 2020-08-11. Retrieved 2020-07-17.
  17. ^ Slaughter, Matthew; Rees, Matthew. "Slaughter & Rees Report: The Betamax Bust and the Future of Global Business". tuck.dartmouth.edu (in الإنجليزية). Retrieved 2025-09-24. The market failure of Betamax is often held up as an emblem of corporate ineptitude.
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