"We were not yet prepared to claim that we had found a new charged lepton, but we were ready to claim that we had found something new. To accentuate our uncertainty I denoted the new particle by U for unknown in some of our 1975-1977 papers. The name
came later. This name was suggested by Rapidis, who was then a graduate student and had worked with me in the early 1970s on the
problem. The letter
is from the Greek
for "third" -the third charged lepton".
Martin Perl, The Discovery of the Tau Lepton, in "The Rise of the Standard Model", Cambridge Univ. Press 1997.
came later. This name was suggested by Rapidis, who was then a graduate student and had worked with me in the early 1970s on the
problem. The letter
for "third" -the third charged lepton".