| gamma ray |
A quantity of energy without mass or charge that is propagated as a wave. High energy short wavelength electromagnetic radiation emitted from the nucleus of an excited atom.
Ãâó: www.llrc.org/jargonbuster.htm
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| gamma. |
Mathematically the second derivative of the option premium with respect to the price of the underlying. Gamma measures the change in the delta of an option for a one-unit change in the price of the underlying. If an option has a delta of 0.49 and a gamma of 0.04, the delta would be expected to rise to around 0.53 if the underlying moved one unit in price. (This relationship is made more complex because gamma itself changes with movements in the underlying). ...
Ãâó: www.montegodata.co.uk/Educate/OptionTerms.htm
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| gamma |
Mathematically the second derivative of the option premium with respect to the price of the underlying. Gamma measures the change in the delta of an option for a one-unit change in the price of the underlying. If an option has a delta of 0.49 and a gamma of 0.04, the delta would be expected to rise to around 0.53 if the underlying moved one unit in price. (This relationship is made more complex because gamma itself changes with movements in the underlying). ...
Ãâó: www.montegodata.co.uk/Educate/OptionTerms.htm
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| gamma rays |
are very high frequency electromagnetic waves.
Ãâó: www.dac.neu.edu/physics/b.maheswaran/phy1121/data/...
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| gamma. |
Curve that describes how the middle tones of images appear. Gamma is a nonlinear function often confused with "brightness" and/or "contrast." Changing the value of the gamma affects middle tones while leaving the white and black of the image unaltered. Gamma adjustment is often used to compensate for differences between Macintosh and Windows video cards and display.
Ãâó: www.brynmawr.edu/filmstudies/writing/glossary.html
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