Who is omega
Omega (uppercase
Ω, lowercase
ω) is the 24th and last letter of the Greek alphabet. In the Greek numeric system, it has a value of 800. The word literally means "great O" (
ō mega, mega meaning 'great'), as opposed to Omicron, which means "little O" (
o mikron, micron meaning "little").[1] This name is Byzantine; in Classical Greek, the letter was called
ō (ὦ), whereas the Omicron was called
ou (οὖ).[2] The form of the lowercase letter derives from a double omicron, which came to be written open at the top.
Phonetically, the Ancient Greek Ω is a long open-mid
o [ɔː], similar to the vowel of English
raw in certain dialects such as RP where this word is pronounced [ɹɔː]. It should not be confused with the sound of English so-called "long o" as in
ocean, which is either diphthongal [oʊ] or [əʊ] or a close-mid kind of "o" [o], in either case distinctly different from the "long o" sound of Greek omega and closer to the Classical Greek sound represented by
ου before this came to be pronounced [u]. In Modern Greek Ω represents the same sound as omicron. The letter omega is transcribed
ō or simply
o.
Omega (the last letter of the Greek alphabet) is often used to denote the last, the end, or the ultimate limit of a set, in contrast to Alpha, the first letter of the Greek alphabet. In the New Testament book of Revelation, God is declared to be the "alpha and omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last".[3]
Omega was also adopted into the early Cyrillic alphabet. See omega (Cyrillic) (Ѡ, ѡ). A Raetic variant is at the origin of Elder Futhark ᛟ.
The symbol Ω (upper case letter)
The upper-case letter Ω is used as a symbol, it is also used often outside its Greek alphabetical context in literature, advertising and other forms of human expression.
- For ohm - SI unit of electrical resistance; formerly also used upside down (℧) to represent mho, the old name for the inverse of an ohm (now siemens with symbol S) used for electrical conductance. Unicode has a separate code point for the ohm sign (U+2126, Ω), but it is only included for backwards compatibility and the Greek uppercase omega character (U+03A9, Ω) is preferred. [4]
- The symbol of the Resistance Movement against the Vietnam-era draft
- In computer science, in notation related to Big O notation to describe the asymptotic behavior of functions. See also Chaitin's constant
- In mathematics:
- the Omega constant, a solution of Lambert's W function; or the first uncountable ordinal number (also known as ω1)
- Chaitin's constant.
- A 2-D region in calculus, usually corresponding to the domain of a double integral.
- In statistics, it is used as the symbol for the sample space, or total set of possible outcomes.
- In physics, the solid angle or the rate of precession in a gyroscope.
- In particle physics to represent the Omega baryons. A lowercase omega is used for the omega mesons.
- In combinatory logic, the looping combinator, (λ x. x x) (λ x. x x)
- In astronomy (cosmology) Ω refers to the density of the universe, also called the density parameter.
- Year or date of death
The symbol ω (lower-case letter)
The lower-case letter ω is used as a symbol:
- In textual criticism, the archetype of a manuscript tradition
- In physics, angular velocity and angular frequency.
- In mathematics, the first transfinite ordinal number
- In number theory, an arithmetic function
- In combinatory logic, the self-application combinator, (λ x. x x)
- In computer science, in notation related to Big O notation, the asymptotically dominant nature of functions
- In astronomy, as a ranking of a star's brightness
- In particle physics to represent the omega meson
- In circuit analysis and signal processing to represent natural frequency, related to frequency f by ω = 2πf.
- In biochemistry to denote the carbon atom furthest from the carboxyl group of a fatty acid.
- Used in place of ん in Japanese typing shorthand.
- In relational database theory ω is used to represent NULL, a missing or inapplicable value.
- In phonology, for a prosodic (or phonological) word.
- In biochemistry, for one of the RNA Polymerase subunits.
Who you says?
- Omega (Doctor Who), a fictional character from the television series
- Omega Ranger, a character from Power Rangers: S.P.D.
- The Omega Man, a 1971 science fiction film
- Omega, an alias of O'Malley, a character in Red vs. Blue; see List of characters in Red vs. Blue
- Omegamon and Omegamon X, the Japanese names for the Digimon characters, Omnimon, as well as his X-Antibody counterpart, Omnimon X
- Doctor Omega, a 1906 science fiction novel by Arnould Galopin
- A character in the Maximum Ride series.
- Omega Red, a comic book supervillain in the Marvel Comics universe
- Omega (comics), a comic book villain from the Legion of Super-Heroes
- Omega Men, a DC Comics superhero group
- Omega (Dead or Alive), the final boss of Dead or Alive 3
- Omega (Final Fantasy), a recurring boss in the Final Fantasy series
- E-123 Omega, a character in the Sonic the Hedgehog series