Xi is the name of the 14th letter of the Greek alphabet (uppercase Ξ or Ξ, lowercase ξ; ).
It is pronounced  in Modern Greek, and generally  or  in English."
xi".
New Oxford American Dictionary, 2nd Edition.
In the system of Greek numerals, it has a value of 60.
Xi was derived from the Phoenician letter samekh 20px.
Xi is distinct from the letter chi, which gave its form to the Latin letter X. Greek
thumb |upright 1.5|left|A joined variant of Ξ (New Athena Unicode font).
Both in classical Ancient Greek and in Modern Greek, the letter Ξ represents the consonant cluster /ks/.
In some archaic local variants of the Greek alphabet, this letter was missing.
Instead, especially in the dialects of most of the Greek mainland and Euboea, the cluster /ks/ was represented by Χ (which in classical Greek is chi, used for ).
Because this variant of the Greek alphabet was used in Magna Graecia (the Greek colonies in Sicilly and the southern part of the Italian peninsula), the Latin alphabet borrowed Χ rather than Ξ as the Latin letter that represented the /ks/ cluster that was also present in Latin.
Cyrillic
The Xi was adopted into the early Cyrillic alphabet, as the letter ksi (Ѯ, ѯ).
Mathematics and science
Uppercase
The uppercase letter Ξ is used as symbol in various contexts.
Pure mathematics
Harish-Chandra's Ξ function in harmonic analysis and representation theory
The Riemann Xi function in analytic number theory and complex analysis
Physics
The "cascade particles" in particle physics
The partition function under the grand canonical ensemble in statistical mechanics
Other uses
Indicating "no change of state" in Z notation in computing
Monetary units of the cryptocurrencies Ether (and less commonly ETC), equal to 1018 Wei
Lowercase
The lowercase letter ξ is used as a symbol for: Pure mathematics
Random variables
A parameter in a generalized Pareto distribution
The symmetric function equation of the Riemann zeta function in mathematics, also known as the Riemann Xi function
A universal set in set theory
A number used in the remainder term of Taylor's theorem that falls between the limits a and b
A number used in error approximations for formulas that are applications of Taylor's theorem, such as Newton–Cotes formulas
Physics and astronomy
In fluid dynamics, the Iribarren parameter.
The initial mass function in astronomy.
The correlation function in astronomy.
Spatial frequency;SPIE Optipedia article: "Spatial Frequency"  also sometimes temporal frequency.
A small displacement in MHD plasma stability theory
The x-coordinate of computational space as used in computational fluid dynamics
Potential difference in physics (in volts)
The radial integral in the spin-orbit matrix operator in atomic physics.
The Killing vector in general relativity.
Average logarithmic energy decrement per collision (neutron calculations in nuclear physics)
Pippard's cohesion length in superconductors
The diameter of a crystal nucleus in nucleation theory
Microturbulence velocity in a stellar atmosphere
The dimensionless longitudinal momentum loss of a beam particle after a two-body interaction in accelerator physics.
Dimensionless distance variable used in the Lane–Emden equation
Other uses
Propositional variables in some philosophical works, first found in Wittgenstein's Tractatus
Extent of reaction, a concept in physical chemistryIUPAC Gold Book Entry: "Extent of Reaction"  used often in chemical engineering kinetics and thermochemistry
Unknown stereochemistry or stereocentre configuration in a planar ring system in organic chemistry, as well as uppercase Xi for unknown R/S/E/Z configuration in general
Damping Ratio C/Ccr(vibrational analysis)
One of the two different polypeptide chains of the human embryonic hemoglobin types Hb-Portland (ξ2γ2) and Hb-Gower I (ξ2ε2)
A parameter denoted as warped time used to derive the equations for homogeneous azeotropic distillation
State Price Density in mathematical finance
The information vector in the Information Filter, GraphSLAM, and a number of other algorithms used for robot localization and robotic mapping.
Used in Support Vector machines in cases where the data is not linearly separable.
Character encodings
Greek Xi / Coptic Ksi
Unicode Code Charts: Greek and Coptic (Range: 0370-03FF) Mathematical Xi
The following 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.
Other uses
thumb|right|Ξ for E in a commercial logo.
Uppercase Ξ is used as an 'E' to stylise company names/logos like Razer (styled as RΛZΞR), Tesla (styled as TΞSLA), musician Banners (styled as BANNΞRS), and in South Korean boy group ZE:A's newest logo (styled as "ZΞA") (Compare: Heavy Metal umlaut; Faux Cyrillic) References
