MAT 117 Fall /27/10 or 10/28/10 Worksheet 16 Section 8.1 & 8.2 Setting the Tone

Similar documents
Math in the Real World: Music (9+)

Math, Music and Memory Fall 2014 The Monochord Lab: Length Versus Pitch

Math in the Real World: Music (7/8)

Seeing Music, Hearing Waves

2. When is an overtone harmonic? a. never c. when it is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency b. always d.

Lab 10 The Harmonic Series, Scales, Tuning, and Cents

THE ILL-TEMPERED MATHEMATICIAN. John R. Silvester Department of Mathematics King s College London

LCC for Guitar - Introduction

Intervals For The Guitar

Tuning and Temperament

II. Tuning & Setup. Figure 1: This is where the guitar s open string s pitches really SOUND. Open 3rd String

The Magical Mathematics of Music

constructive interference results when destructive interference results when two special interference patterns are the and the

GUITAR for left-handed players

Chapter 17. The Principle of Linear Superposition and Interference Phenomena

Beginner Guitar Theory: The Essentials

Chapter 17. Linear Superposition and Interference

Music and Engineering: Just and Equal Temperament

Introduction to Lead Guitar. Playing Scales-Introducing the Minor Pentatonic Scale

SUGGESTED ACTIVITIES

Sound & Music. how musical notes are produced and perceived. calculate the frequency of the pitch produced by a string or pipe

Worksheet 15.2 Musical Instruments

Waves & Sound. In this chapter you will be working with waves that are periodic or that repeat in a regular pattern.

Music. Sound Part II

Ch17. The Principle of Linear Superposition and Interference Phenomena. The Principle of Linear Superposition

Chapter 1 The Major Scale

PHYSICS AND THE GUITAR JORDY NETZEL LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY

Fretboard Secrets Exposed. Step-by-Step Workout Exercises and

Barbershop Tuning By Ted Chamberlain for HCNW

Mathematics, Music, and the Guitar

Fully Understand the Fretboard

INTRODUCTION: LET S LEARN!

! Close!Reading!and!Text!Dependent!Questions!in!Science! Highs!and!Lows!(Physics!of!Sound!!Grade!3)!!!!

Musical Acoustics Lecture 17 Interval, Scales, Tuning and Temperament - II

Understanding and Using Pentatonics Creatively: Lesson 1

Playing Past the 4th Fret

5-6 Study Guide. Radical Expressions and Rational Exponents. Attendance Problems. Simplify each expression. (No decimal answers!

A practical approach to learning essential scales using the Blues scale.

EXERCISE 1 THE MONOCHORD: PYTHAGORAS, HARMONIA AND COSMOS

Music: Sound that follows a regular pattern; a mixture of frequencies which have a clear mathematical relationship between them.

Music I. Marking Period 1. Marking Period 3

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc.

SECTION A Waves and Sound

Chord Tones: Targeting Blues Guitar. Chord Tones: Targeting Blues Guitar

Copyright 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Rhythm. Chords. Play these three chords in the following pattern of 12 bars.

Additional Open Chords

The Unlimited Licks System

What Do You Think? For You To Do GOALS

ACOUSTICS. Sounds are vibrations in the air, extremely small and fast fluctuations of airpressure.

Definition of Basic Terms:

THE INTEGERS AS INTERVALS

Guitar chords and scales. J. Chaurette, December 2012

Chapter 16. Waves and Sound

SECTION A Waves and Sound

We aren't going to play any 4/4 time signatures because you already know this style. Let's try some others.

Sound Interference and Resonance: Standing Waves in Air Columns

b) (4) How large is the effective spring constant associated with the oscillations, in N/m?

Focus on Mathematics

Inspection Process Acoustic Guitars

Waves and Modes. Part I. Standing Waves. A. Modes

The Well Tempered Pythagorean: The Remarkable Relation Between Western and Natural Harmonic Music

No Brain Too Small PHYSICS

Approach Notes and Enclosures for Jazz Guitar Guide

for Makerspaces Match the pitch!

Equal Beating Victorian Temperament (EBVT)

AP Homework (Q2) Does the sound intensity level obey the inverse-square law? Why?

The Helmholtz Resonance

5 th Grade Orchestra Curriculum Map

There are three melodies, and there are six strings on a standard guitar (assuming we are also tuned to standard tuning). Let s do the math:

The Shearer Method: Guitar Harmony. by Alan Hirsh

Music 171: Amplitude Modulation

As Simple as Chords Get! Introducing Mini-Chords

The Basics of Minor ii V Soloing for Jazz Guitar. The Basics of Minor ii V Soloing

Vibrato and Tremolo Analysis. Antonio DiCristofano Amanda Manaster May 13, 2016 Physics 406 L1

Guitars Are Non-Linear! An Honors Thesis (HONRS 499) Jeff Smith. Thesis Advisor. Dr. John W. Emert. Ball State University.

Chapter 21 Musical Instruments

Date Period Name. Write the term that corresponds to the description. Use each term once. beat

The quality of your written communication will be assessed in your answer. (Total 6 marks)

Pro 2 OS 1.4 Manual Addendum

Physical Consonance Law of Sound Waves

Demonstrate understanding of wave systems. Demonstrate understanding of wave systems. Achievement Achievement with Merit Achievement with Excellence

An introduction to rootless jazz chords

THE ULTIMATE PIANO WORKOUT

In a piano keyboard that has 88 keys, there are only 12 notes that get repeated over and over in octaves.

PHYSICS. Sound & Music

3. Strike a tuning fork and move it in a wide circle around your head. Listen for the pitch of the sound. ANSWER ON YOUR DOCUMENT

Automatic Piano Tuning

Physics 20 Lesson 31 Resonance and Sound

Chapter 1 - Find Chords Anywhere!

ConcepTest Clicker Questions Chapter 14

Sound and the Codec Output. On the DE2

Sound Lab. How well can you match sounds?

Concepts in Physics. Friday, November 26th 2009

Chapter Two: Reading music and the left hand

I have a very different viewpoint. The electric bass is a critical part of the musical foundation of the guitar choir.

Alternate Button Functions

SOUND & MUSIC. Sound & Music 1

MUSIC THEORY GLOSSARY

Waves and Sound Practice Test 43 points total Free- response part: [27 points]

Transcription:

Names: MAT 117 Fall 2010 10/27/10 or 10/28/10 Worksheet 16 Section 8.1 & 8.2 Setting the Tone This worksheet is loosely connected with sections 8.1 and 8.2, but covers a variety of mathematical topics. Preparation problems: Section 8.1, p. 359, #5, 7, 31; Section 8.2, p. 370, #1, 7, 15 In music, the frequency of a given sound determines the pitch. For example, a tone with a frequency of 220 Hz (a Hertz is the number of cycles per second made by the sound wave) makes the sound of the note called A below middle C. The next A, one octave higher, has frequency 440 Hz. Doubling the frequency always results in a note that is one octave higher. So doubling a pitch of 440 Hz to 880 Hz gives us yet another A, this time two octaves higher than the original. Similarly, halving 220 Hz gives us another A, this time with a frequency of 110 Hz, which is one octave below the original note. The tricky part is finding the frequencies of the notes in between. We have been conditioned, by listening to music all our lives, to hear certain notes as right or in tune. It was Pythagoras (of the Pythagorean theorem) who discovered that when two notes are played together and they create a pleasant sound, the ratio of their frequencies could be written as the ratio of two small whole numbers. For example, a C with a frequency of 264 Hz sounds very nice with a G of frequency 396 Hz. The fraction simplifies to, so the ratio of their frequencies is 3:2. Generally, the smaller the number in the simplified ratio, the more pleasant the sound. The most common type of scale, a major scale, consists of the eight notes we sometimes think of as do re mi fa so la ti do. In the key of C, these notes are C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C, or just one octave of the white keys on the piano. When counting from C to D, we call that move one whole-step or two half-steps, since C# is between the two. Since some of the notes in the major C scale do not have notes in between them, it is easier to count in half-steps rather than in whole-steps. The move from C to G, for example, is 7 half-steps.

1. If we use the nice ratios that Pythagoras discovered, comparing the frequencies of the different notes works fine as long as you stay in a particular key. However, some of the frequencies do not match when comparing the same note in different keys. Show this by completing Tables 1 and 2. The ratios given in Table 1 are that of the frequencies between a given note and C. For example, the ratio of the frequencies between D and C is. Table 2 gives the expected ratio between a given note and D. Round the frequencies to the nearest 0.1 Hz. Table 1 Note Ratio of frequencies Frequency (Hz) C 0 1:1 264 D 2 9:8 297 E 4 5:4 F 5 4:3 G 7 3:2 A 9 5:3 B 11 15:8 C 12 2:1 528 Table 2 Note Ratio of frequencies Frequency (Hz) D 0 1:1 297 E 2 9:8 F# 4 5:4 G 5 4:3 A 7 3:2 B 9 5:3 C# 11 15:8 D 12 2:1 594 You can see that a problem immediately presents itself. What is called an E has a frequency of 330 Hz in the key of C and a frequency of 334.1 Hz in the key of D. Being

in tune in one key would then sound out of tune in another. The problem continues for every possible key and there are twelve major scales alone! The impact of this on the music world was significant. Musicians were not always able to play with each other. If they started tuning with different notes they would sound out of tune. Because of this, they would need to play every piece in the same key to always have the instrument in tune. That turns out to be quite boring after awhile. It would also be torture for singers who would sometimes be forced to sing above or below their range. One solution to the tuning dilemma was to redefine what was considered in tune. Instead of making all of the intervals nice ratios, it was decided around the year 1600 to take the twelve notes of the scale and make the ratio of one note to the next the same. In other words, take the frequency for A (110 Hz) and multiply it by some value,, to get the frequency for A#. Then take the frequency for A# and multiply it by the same to get the same frequency for B. Continue this process until you get to the next A which is 220 Hz. This will give you a geometric sequence with as its constant ratio. The idea didn t hit with immediate acceptance. In fact, it took more than 200 years before it was universally accepted. Bach helped matters along by writing a series of pieces in the early 1700 s for the newly tuned keyboard called the Well-Tempered Clavier. It wasn t until the 19 th century that equal temperament was adopted by all countries and for all instruments. 2. Let s determine exactly how all twelve notes in a scale can be equally tempered. a. If we multiply by a constant ratio to get from a note to the note one halfstep higher, what should we multiply by to get from a note to the note one octave, which is 12 half-steps, higher? b. Doubling the frequency of any note (i.e., multiplying the frequency by 2) will give the same note one octave higher. Use this information to determine the exact value of. c. Using the constant ratio,, determined in part b., complete Table 3 by finding the frequencies for the missing notes from A (110 Hz) to A (220 Hz). Round to the nearest 0.1 Hz.

Table 3 Note Frequency (Hz) 0 A 110 1 A# 2 B 3 C 4 C# 5 D 6 D# 7 E 8 F 9 F# 10 G 11 G# 12 A 220 d. Find a function in which the number of half-steps,, above the starting note, A, is the input and the frequency of the note,, is the output. This should be an exponential function. 3. On different musical instruments various things are done to change the frequency of the notes. One common method is to change the length of a tube or pipe, as in organs or trombones, or to change the length of a string, as in violins or guitars. If you take a string on a guitar and decrease its length by half, the frequency of the note played is doubled. In this situation the relationship between a note and its frequency is similar to that between a note and the length of the string on which it is played. This relationship, however, is backwards. As a note gets higher its frequency is given by a larger number, but its string length is given by a smaller number. We measured the length of the A string on a guitar and found it to be 61.2 centimeters. When a string is played without reducing its length, the note is an A. When the length is reduced by

moving your finger on the fingerboard, the frequency of the tone increases. When the string is half as long as the original, the frequency is doubled and the first octave, or A, is heard. a. Halving the length of any guitar string will give the same note one octave higher. Because of this, what would be the ratio of string lengths of a note and the note one octave lower? Assume the ratio of string lengths,, between each of the 12 half-steps in each octave is the same. Determine the exact value of. b. Using the constant ratio,, determined in part a., complete Table 4 by finding the missing lengths of the A string. They should form a geometric sequence. If you were building a guitar these numbers would also determine the positions of the frets. Frets are the metal ridges along the neck of a guitar. When you push down on a string on the neck of a guitar, a fret will cut the string off at just the right point to produce the note you want. Table 4 Note String length (cm) 0 A 61.2 1 A# 2 B 3 C 4 C# 5 D 6 D# 7 E 8 F 9 F# 10 G 11 G# 12 A 30.6

c. Determine the function in which the number of half-steps above the starting note,, from Table 4, is the input and the length of the string,, is the output. This should be an exponential function. 4. The frequency of a specific guitar string is inversely proportional to its length. Let s show that this is true, at least for the A string on our guitar. a. Combine your data from Tables 3 and 4 in Table 5. Table 5 Note String length (cm) Frequency (Hz) 0 A 61.2 110 1 A# 2 B 3 C 4 C# 5 D 6 D# 7 E 8 F 9 F# 10 G 11 G# 12 A 30.6 220 b. If the frequency of the guitar string is inversely proportional to its length, then the product of a string length and its corresponding frequency is a constant. Using a few data values from Table 5, approximate that constant. (Since rounding occurred in the determining the values in Table 5, you won t get exactly the same value for each product, but they should be close.) c. Let represent your frequency function from question 2.d. and let represent your string length function from question 3.c. Which composition

of functions below would represent the function that would have the data for the string length column of Table 5 as the input and the data in the frequency column as the output? Explain your answer. d. Find the formula for the function composition that you determined was correct in part c. Does your resulting function show that the frequency of the guitar string is inversely proportional to the length? Explain.