Sound waves
Variations in
air
pressure against the
ear drum, and the subsequent
physical and neurological processing and interpretation, give rise
to the experience called "sound".
Most sound that people recognize as "musical"
is dominated by
periodic or regular vibrations
rather than non-periodic ones (called a
definite pitch), and we refer to
the transmission mechanism as a "sound wave". In a very simple
case, the sound of a
sine wave, which is considered to
be the most basic model of a sound waveform, causes the air
pressure to increase and decrease in a regular fashion, and is
heard as a very "pure" tone. Pure tones can be produced by
tuning forks. The rate at which
the air pressure varies governs the
frequency of the tone, which is
also measured in oscillations per second, or
Hertz. Frequency is a primary
determinate of the perceived
pitch.
A
spectrogram of
violin playing. The bright
lines along the bottom are the fundamentals of each note, and
the other bright lines are (nearly) harmonic overtones,
collectively they are
spectra.
Whenever two different pitches are played at the
same time, their sound waves interact with each other - the highs
and lows in the air pressure reinforce each other to produce a
different sound wave. As a result, any given sound wave which is
more complicated than a sine wave can, nonetheless, be modelled by
many different sine waves of the appropriate frequencies and
amplitudes. In
humans the
hearing apparatus (composed of
the
ears and
brain) can isolate these tones
and hear them distinctly. When two or more tones are played at
once, a single variation of air pressure at the ear "contains" the
pitches of each, and the ear and/or brain isolate and decode them
into distinct tones.
When the original sound sources are perfectly
periodic, the
note consists of several related
sine waves (which mathematically add to each other) called the
fundamental and the
harmonics,
partials, or
overtones. The sounds have
harmonic
spectra. The lowest frequency
present is the fundamental, and is the frequency that the entire
wave vibrates at. The overtones vibrate faster than the
fundamental, but must vibrate at integer multiples of the
fundamental frequency in order for the total wave to be exactly
the same each cycle. Real instruments are close to periodic, but
the frequencies of the overtones are slightly imperfect, so the
shape of the wave changes slightly over time.
Harmonics, partials, and overtones
The fundamental is the frequency at which the
entire wave vibrates. Overtones are other sinusoidal components
present at frequencies above the fundamental. All of the frequency
components that make up the total waveform, including the
fundamental and the overtones, are called
partials.
Overtones which are perfect integer multiples of
the fundamental are called
harmonics. When an overtone is
near to being harmonic, but not exact, it is sometimes called a
harmonic partial, although they are often referred to simply as
harmonics. Sometimes overtones are created that are not anywhere
near a harmonic, and are just called partials or inharmonic
overtones.
The fundamental frequency is considered the
first harmonic and the first partial. The numbering of
the partials and harmonics is then usually the same; the second
partial is the second harmonic, etc. But if there are inharmonic
partials, the numbering no longer coincides. Overtones are
numbered as they appear above the fundamental. So strictly
speaking, the first overtone is the second partial
(and usually the second harmonic). As this can result in
confusion, only harmonics are usually referred to by their
numbers, and overtones and partials are described by their
relationships to those harmonics.
Harmonics and non-linearities
A symmetric and asymmetric waveform. The red contains only the
fundamental and odd harmonics, the green contains the
fundamental and even harmonics.
200 and 300 Hz waves and their sum, showing the periods of each
A spectrogram of a violin playing a note and then a perfect
fifth above it. The shared partials are highlighted by the white
dashes.
When a periodic wave is composed of a
fundamental and only odd harmonics (f, 3f, 5f, 7f, ...), the
summed wave is symmetrical; it can be inverted and phase shifted
and be exactly the same. If the wave has any even harmonics (0f,
2f, 4f, 6f, ...), it will be asymmetrical; the top half will not
be a mirror image of the bottom.
The opposite is also true. A system which
changes the shape of the wave (beyond simple scaling or shifting)
creates additional harmonics. This is called a non-linear
system. If it affects the wave symmetrically, the harmonics
produced will only be odd, if asymmetrically, at least one even
harmonic will be produced (and possibly also odd).
Harmony
If two notes are simultaneously played, with
frequency
ratios that are simple fractions
(e.g. 2/1, 3/2 or 5/4), then the composite wave will still be
periodic with a short period, and the combination will sound
consonant. For instance, a note
vibrating at 200 Hz and a note vibrating at 300 Hz (a perfect
fifth, or 3/2 ratio, above 200 Hz) will add together to make a
wave that repeats at 100 Hz: every 1/100 of a second, the 300 Hz
wave will repeat thrice and the 200 Hz wave will repeat twice.
Note that the total wave repeats at 100 Hz, but there is not
actually a 100 Hz sinusoidal component present.
Additionally, the two notes will have many of
the same partials. For instance, a note with a fundamental
frequency of 200 Hz will have harmonics at
(200,) 400, 600, 800, 1000, 1200, ...
A note with fundamental frequency of 300 Hz will
have harmonics at
(300,) 600, 900, 1200, 1500, …
The two notes have the harmonics 600 and 1200 in
common, and more will coincide further up the series.
The combination of composite waves with short
fundamental frequencies and shared or closely related partials is
what causes the sensation of
harmony.
When two frequencies are near to a simple
fraction, but not exact, the composite wave cycles slowly enough
to hear the cancellation of the waves as a steady pulsing instead
of a tone. This is called
beating, and is considered to be
unpleasant, or
dissonant
The frequency of beating is calculated as the
difference between the frequencies of the two notes. For the
example above, |200 Hz - 300 Hz| = 100 Hz. As another example, a
combination of 3425 Hz and 3426 Hz would beat once per second
(|3425 Hz - 3426 Hz| = 1 Hz). This follows from
modulation theory.
The difference between consonance and dissonance
is not clearly defined, but the higher the beat frequency, the
more likely the interval to be consonant.
Helmholtz proposed that maximum
dissonance would arise between two pure tones when the beat rate
is roughly 35 Hz.
[1] (http://www.music-cog.ohio-state.edu/Music829B/roughness.html)
The natural scale
Human beings distinguish sounds on the basis of
their frequency. Actually what really matters is the ratio
between their frequencies.
The natural scale is attributed to the Grecian
philosopher
Aristoxenus Tarentinus and
consists in a succession of notes with increasing frequencies.
After fixing the frequency of the first note -
the C of the scale - the frequencies of the other notes are
determined from the ratios indicated in the following table. On
the last C the following octave begins and the operation can be
repeated.
The following table shows the ratios between the
frequencies of all the notes of the scale and the fixed frequency
of the first note of the scale.
| C |
1 |
| D |
9/8 |
| E |
5/4 |
| F |
4/3 |
| G |
3/2 |
| A |
5/3 |
| B |
15/8 |
| C |
2 |
The temperate scale
In the natural scale the ratio of the
frequencies of two notes which differ for one tone is not always
the same. Consequently a certain melody cannot be played starting
from a random note of the scale. For instance, a melody starting
with the two notes C and D (ratio 9/8) cannot be transposed one
tone higher, since the ratio of the frequencies of E and of D is
very near ((5/4)/(9/8) = 10/9), but not equal to 9/8.
To obviate this inconveniency, we use the
so-called
temperate scale, which
constitutes the compromise adopted in the western music.
It is obtained by dividing one octave in 12
intervals, called semitones or halfsteps, so that the ratio of the
frequencies of two consecutives semitones is constant and equal to
,
whose numeric value is 1.059463.
This is also the value of the ratio of the
widths of two consecutive
frets on a
guitar. The twelfth fret divides
the string in two exact halves.
The following table shows a comparison between
the natural scale and the temperate scale:
|
Note |
Temperate Scale |
Natural Scale |
| Power |
Value |
Fraction |
Value |
| C |
20/12 |
1.000 |
1/1 |
1.000 |
| C# / Db |
21/12 |
1.059 |
|
|
| D |
22/12 |
1.122 |
9/8 |
1.125 |
| D# / Eb |
23/12 |
1.189 |
|
|
| E |
24/12 |
1.260 |
5/4 |
1.250 |
| F |
25/12 |
1.335 |
4/3 |
1.333 |
| F# / Gb |
26/12 |
1.414 |
|
|
| G |
27/12 |
1.498 |
3/2 |
1.500 |
| G# / Ab |
28/12 |
1.587 |
|
|
| A |
29/12 |
1.682 |
5/3 |
1.666 |
| A# / Bb |
210/12 |
1.782 |
|
|
| B |
211/12 |
1.888 |
15/8 |
1.875 |
| C |
212/12 |
2.000 |
2/1 |
2.000 |
See also