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Tau

Tau is the name of the nineteenth letter of the Greek alphabet. Its uppercase form is Τ and lowercase is τ. The letter derives from the Phoenician taw and is used in Greek to represent the voiceless 't' sound. In modern use, it appears in various scientific, mathematical, and linguistic contexts as a symbol.

In science and mathematics, tau denotes several quantities: torque in mechanics, where τ represents the moment of

In geometry and number theory there is also a proposal to adopt the circle constant tau as

In biology, tau is the name of a microtubule-associated protein that stabilizes microtubules in neurons. Abnormal

force;
the
time
constant
in
many
exponential
processes
such
as
RC
circuits,
where
voltage
or
current
decays
with
time
constant
τ;
and
in
particle
physics,
the
tau
lepton
(a
heavy
charged
lepton)
and
the
tau
neutrino,
its
neutral
partner.
2π,
rather
than
π,
for
calculations
involving
radians.
Proponents
argue
that
tau
streamlines
many
formulas.
The
value
is
tau
≈
6.283185307...,
i.e.,
tau
equals
two
times
pi;
however,
pi
remains
the
more
widely
used
constant.
tau
proteins
can
aggregate
into
neurofibrillary
tangles
and
are
implicated
in
neurodegenerative
diseases
such
as
Alzheimer's
disease
and
other
tauopathies.