Re the 7th harmonic,in the tempered scale, the dominant 7th should be 2
10/12 times the frequency of the tonic below=1.78 times the frequency of the tonic below it.
The tonic is 4f1. The ratio of 7 f1 to4 f1 is
7/4 = 1.75 So this note is a very flat dominant 7th, and should not be played as an harmonic in this series. A brass player
playing this series of harmonicsmust play an harmonic of another note to play this
note in tune.
For the whirly tube,f1= v/λ
If the tube length L is 1 m, thenf1 =v/2L =344/2= 177Hz
f2= 2f= 344 Hz, f3 = 3 f1= 531 Hz
f4=4f1=708 Hz, etc.Compare to measurements…
A string on an instrument plays an A (440 Hz) when plucked. If you put your finger down one half of the way along the string, and then pluck, you are mostly likely to hear…
A: Still 440 Hz
B: 220 Hz
C: 880 Hz
D: Something entirely different
ct.10.1.10a
A string on an instrument plays an A (440 Hz) and a number of higher harmonics when plucked. If you put your finger down one half of the way along the string after it has been plucked, you are mostly likely to hear…
A: Still 440 Hz
B: 220 Hz
C: 880 Hz
D: Something entirely different
ct.10.1.10a
A string on an instrument plays an A (440 Hz) when plucked. If you put your finger down hard (pushing the string to the fret), one third of the way along the string, and then pluck the longer side, you are mostly likely to hear…
A: 3*440Hz
B: (1/3)*440 Hz
C: 3/2 * 440 Hz
D: 2/3 * 440 Hz
E: Something entirely different
ct.10.1.10b2