I'm trying to achive a more angled $v$ that is more distinct from $u$. The default math mode v looks like this in the default font:

What I'm trying to achive is something like this (from txfonts):

(Edit: the picture is a bit misleading - I posted it to demonstrate the angledness. I'm not trying to get the Greek letter "nu", but rather the classic Latin letter "v" which is straight-lined and mostly symmetric.)
I remember I used to be able to get the alternative v by using \varv (analogously to \varphi), but I guess this was just a command defined in the template I used when I didn't know much LaTeX. I can't find a package that defines \varv. Ironically (and confusingly), the angled v is default in txfonts, and to get the rounded one, there is a package option called varv.
I'm using the default fonts right now (Computer Modern / lmodern), but I might switch to Minion or Palatino plus matching math (mathpazo for Palatino, forgot what the math font for Minion was called), so an ideal solution would be somewhat font independent.


$\nu$(if you are not planning on using nu). It can be font-dependent, however. – Steven B. Segletes Aug 28 '13 at 19:57newtxmathpackage provides avin math mode that looks more like a\nuthan au. (It also provides avargoption that changes the appearance of thevback.) It uses—as the name suggests—a Times-like font for math-mode. There is alsonewtxtext. – Qrrbrbirlbel Aug 28 '13 at 20:34