The prime symbol , double prime symbol , triple prime symbol , and quadruple prime symbol are used to designate units and for other purposes in mathematics, science, linguistics and music.
Although the characters differ little in appearance from those of the apostrophe and single and double , the uses of the prime symbol are quite different. While an apostrophe is now often used in place of the prime, and a double quote in place of the double prime (due to the lack of prime symbols on everyday writing keyboards), such substitutions are not considered appropriate in formal materials or in typesetting.
Primes are also used for angle. The prime symbol is used for ( of a degree), and the double prime for ( of an arcminute). As an angular measurement, means 3 degrees, 5 arcminutes and 30 arcseconds. In historical astronomical works, the triple prime was used to denote "thirds" ( of an arcsecond) and a quadruple prime "fourths" ( of a third of arc), but modern usage has replaced this with decimal fractions of an arcsecond.
Primes are sometimes used to indicate minutes, and double primes to indicate seconds of time, as in the John Cage composition 433 (spoken as "four thirty-three"), a composition that lasts exactly 4 minutes 33 seconds. This notation only applies to duration, and is seldom used for durations longer than 60 minutes.
Usually, the meaning of is defined when it is first used, but sometimes, its meaning is assumed to be understood:
In geometry, geography and astronomy, prime and double prime are used as abbreviations for minute and second of arc (and thus latitude, longitude, elevation and right ascension).
In physics, the prime is used to denote variables after an event. For example, may indicate the velocity of object A after an event. It is also commonly used in relativity: the event at in frame , has coordinates in frame .
In chemistry, it is used to distinguish between different functional groups connected to an atom in a molecule, such as and , representing different alkyl groups in an organic compound. The carbonyl carbon in proteins is denoted as , which distinguishes it from the other backbone carbon, the alpha carbon, which is denoted as . In physical chemistry, it is used to distinguish between the lower state and the upper state of a quantum number during a transition. For example, denotes the upper state of the quantum number while denotes the lower state of the quantum number .
In molecular biology, the prime is used to denote the positions of carbon on a ring of deoxyribose or ribose. The prime distinguishes places on these two chemicals, rather than places on other parts of DNA or RNA, like or . Thus, when indicating the direction of movement of an enzyme along a string of DNA, biologists will say that it moves from the end to the end, because these carbons are on the ends of the DNA molecule. The chemistry of this reaction demands that the be extended by DNA synthesis. Prime can also be used to indicate which position a molecule has attached to, such as
Originally, X-bar theory used a bar over syntactic units to indicate bar-levels in syntactic structure, generally rendered as an overbar. While easy to write, the bar notation proved difficult to typeset, leading to the adoption of the prime symbol to indicate a bar. (Despite the lack of bar, the unit would still be read as "X bar", as opposed to "X prime".) With contemporary development of typesetting software such as LaTeX, typesetting bars is considerably simpler; nevertheless, both prime and bar markups are accepted usages.
Some X-bar notations use a double prime (standing in for a double-bar) to indicate a phrasal level, indicated in most notations by "XP".
In some musical scores, the double prime is used to indicate a length of time in seconds. It is used over a fermata denoting a long note or rest.
The "modifier letter prime" and "modifier letter double prime" characters are intended for linguistic purposes, such as the indication of stress or the transliteration of certain Cyrillic characters.
In a context when the character set used does not include the prime or double prime character (e.g., in an online discussion context where only ASCII or ISO 8859-1 ISO is expected), they are often respectively approximated by ASCII apostrophe (U+0027) or quotation mark (U+0022).
LaTeX provides an oversized prime symbol, (), which, when used in super- or sub-scripts, renders appropriately; e.g., f_\prime^\prime appears as . When in math mode, an apostrophe, , is a shortcut for a superscript prime; e.g., appears as .
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