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The Physics of Music Waves 2011-2012.

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Presentation on theme: "The Physics of Music Waves 2011-2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Physics of Music Waves

2 Sources of Sound As we learned yesterday, sound is produced by a vibrating object. Reed instruments (clarinet, saxophone, etc.) have a wooden reed that vibrates as air passes by it. For brass instruments (tuba, trumpet, etc.), it is the lips of the person playing the instrument that vibrate.

3 Resonance in Air Columns
Closed-pipe resonator A resonating tube with one end closed. The sound wave will reflect back up off of a closed surface. Open-pipe resonator A resonating tube with both ends open. The sound wave will reflect back up off of an open surface.

4 Resonance in Air Columns
Resonance lengths A standing sound wave in a pipe can be shown using a sine wave, that represent either the air pressure or the displacement of the air particles. These standing waves have nodes and antinodes. Pressure – the nodes are regions of mean pressure and the antinodes are regions of high or low pressure Displacement – the nodes are regions of low displacement and the antinodes are regions of high displacement

5 Resonance in Air Columns
Resonance frequencies in a closed pipe The shortest column of air that can have an antinode at the closed end and a node at the other is one-fourth of a wavelength long. Additional resonant frequencies occur every ½ wavelength. λ/4, 3λ/4, 5λ/4, etc.

6 Resonance in Air Columns
Resonance frequencies in an open pipe The shortest column of air that can have nodes at both ends is one-half of a wavelength long. Additional resonant frequencies occur every ½ wavelength. λ/2, λ, 3λ/2, etc.

7 Resonance on Strings Because a string on an instrument is clamped on both ends, it must have nodes at each end. Resonance frequencies occur at λ/2, λ, 3λ/2, 2λ, etc. The tighter the string, the faster the wave moves along it, therefore the higher the frequency.

8 Sound Quality A tuning fork produces a single, pure sound.
The human voice, a clarinet, and other instruments do not. They have many frequencies that are added together to produce “one” sound. The difference between two is called timbre (tone color, tone quality).

9 The Sound Spectrum Fundamental – the lowest frequency that resonates for an instrument. Also called the first harmonic. Harmonics – odd-number multiples of the fundamental frequency.

10 Consonance and Dissonance
Dissonance – an unpleasant set of pitches Consonance – a pleasant combination of pitches Different cultures have different definitions of what is defined to be pleasant.

11 Beats Interference is the interaction of two or more waves.
Beats – the periodic fluctuation in the loudness of sound due to the interference of two sound waves.


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