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1 Science of Music 1.3 The Ups and Downs. 2 Things that go back and forth  Pendulum  Mass on Spring.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Science of Music 1.3 The Ups and Downs. 2 Things that go back and forth  Pendulum  Mass on Spring."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Science of Music 1.3 The Ups and Downs

2 2 Things that go back and forth  Pendulum  Mass on Spring

3 3 Another Graph.. a biggy! -1.5 -0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 0510152025 Time (seconds) disturbance Height

4 4 Important Definitions The PERIOD, T is the time it takes to go from one condition to the next time that exact condition is repeated. The frequency, the number of oscillations per second, is given by: Example: If T=2 seconds F=1/2 (sec -1 )=0.5 per second

5 5 Question What is a tone and how do you prove it??

6 6 Hemholtz  In physiology and physiological psychology,physiologyphysiological psychology  he is known for his mathematics of the eye, eye  theories of vision,vision  ideas on the visual perception of space,perception  color vision research, color vision  the sensation of tone,  perception of sound.  In physics, he is known for his theories on the conservation of force,physicsforce  work in electrodynamics, chemical thermodynamics,electrodynamicschemical thermodynamics  A mechanical foundation of thermodynamics.mechanical thermodynamics 1821 - 1894

7 7 Siren … a scientific instrument

8 8 The Graph

9 9 100 Bottles of beer on the wall …

10 10 Resonance (later) Rotational Speed (Turns/second) Loudness

11 11 Helmholtz Resonators

12 12

13 13 Helmholtz’s Results Note from Middle CFrequency C264 D297 E330 F352 G396 A440 B496

14 14 We need to try to remember a few things from High School Physics  Definitions of acceleration and force.  Newton’s Laws  Directional Thingys … vectors.  Relax … it ain’t that hard.

15 15 Velocity (speed)  Velocity is the distance you have traveled divided by the time it took you to travel the distance.  If you travel the 20 miles from Orlando to Lake Buena Vista in 20 minutes, you have traveled speed = 20 miles/20 minutes = 1 mi/min or 60 miles per hour. On I-4 you would also get a ticket if you could drive that fast.

16 16 Acceleration  Something that is moving at one speed and then starts moving at a faster (or slower) speed is said to be accelerating. Your car accelerates when you start driving it or when you enter a highway (except for I-4 on occasion). You accelerate if you jump out of the window of a tall building. The acceleration continues until the splat.

17 17 Definition  If you start at a speed of v initial and finish at a speed of v final and it takes a time “t” to accomplish this, then

18 18 Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727) Didn’t really happen but let’s talk about it.

19 19 Interesting Facts about Sir Issac  He lived a long and fruitful life.  He died a virgin.  He invented the calculus.  So did Leibnitz.  They fought about it.  Nobody one.  The apple story is probably untrue but if it IS true, Newton also must have invented applesauce.

20 20 Newton’s Simplified Three Laws  An object moving at a constant velocity will continue moving at that same constant velocity if NOT acted upon by an external force.  If an external force acts on an object it will accelerate in proportion to the force. F=ma the mass is the proportionality constant When you push on something, that something will push back on you with the same force that you are pushing with. (Action = Reaction)

21 21 Who cares about Newton??  If Newton’s laws were not correct, there would not be any music!!!  We will use this stuff in many places but we will not get to deep into it.  See Bolemon (reference list) for more information if you want it.  For more … any College Physics Text will suffice.

22 22 Now …. lets look at the MONOCHORD but with an important detour. Dr. Koons will play the monochord for us soon

23 23 The Spring

24 24 Spring Force Equatiom  F=-kx  The “-” sign indicates that the force and the displacement are in opposite directions.

25 25 Springs Oscillate

26 26 Graph

27 27 Important Result for a Spring:

28 28 So ….

29 29

30 30 Concept … Tension

31 31 The Musical String Force = F x L initial T T T The Bigger the angle the more T points UP! The distance “x” is the same sort of thing as the x in F=-kx. ANGLE

32 32 The Guitar Strings

33 33 Consider Two Situations For the same “x” the restoring force is double because the angle is double. The “mass” is about half because we only have half of the string vibrating.

34 34 So… For the same “x” the restoring force is double because the angle is double. The “mass” is about half because we only have half of the string vibrating. k doubles m -> m/2 f doubles!

35 35 Guitar  Pressing the fret that is in the middle of the string doubles the frequency~ Walla … the octave  In general … the frequency is proportional to the length of the string.  Next time we will examine the monochord and Dr. Koons will show us how we develop (a) musical scale(s).

36 36 Octave

37 37 Take a wire (String on Guitar..) L initial L stretchl L final F

38 38 It has been shown that … More about this when we do the string thing.

39 39 HAVE FUN!


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