Sound in our world – Elenco Snap Circuits® Deluxe Sound & Light Combo User Manual

Page 21

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Sound in Our World

unnerving and unpleasant. Most electronic

speech processing systems being developed

use some form of speech prediction filters.
Take a piece of string or rope roughly 4 feet

long and tie one end of it to a chair or other

piece of furniture. Swing the other end up and

down so that you have a cyclic pattern, as

shown:

Now swing it three times as fast (three times

the frequency), to produce this pattern:

Now try to swing it five times as fast (five times

the frequency), to produce this pattern:

Since the later patterns are frequency

multiples of the first, we refer to them as

overtones (the music term) or harmonics (the

electronics term) and the original pattern is

called the fundamental. If you could combine

all three of the above patterns onto the string

then you would get a pattern, which looks like

this:

This combined pattern (a single fundamental

with overtones) is called a tone (and a pure

tone is a single fundamental with no

overtones). Notice that each pattern is more

difficult to produce than the one before it, with

the combined pattern being quite complicated.

And also notice that the more complicated

patterns are much more interesting and

pleasing to look at than the simpler ones. Well

the same thing applies to sound waves.

Complex patterns that have many overtones

for each fundamental are more pleasant to

listen to than simple patterns. If many

overtones were combined together, the results

would approximate a square wave shape.
All traditional music instruments use this

principle, with the instrument shapes and

materials perfected through the years to

produce many overtones for each fundamental

chord or key that is played by the user. Grand

pianos sound better than upright pianos since

their larger shape enables them to produce

more overtones, especially at lower

frequencies. Concert halls sound better than

small rooms because they are designed for

best overtone performance and to take

advantage of the fact that sound waves can

reflect off walls to produce different overtone

relationships between both of your ears. The

same thing applies to stereo sound. You may

have heard the term acoustics; this is the

science of designing rooms for best sound

effects.
A commonly used musical scale (which

measures pitch) will now be introduced. This

scale is called the equal temperament scale,

expressed in hertz. You might think of this as

a conversion table between the artistic and

scientific worlds since it expresses pitch in

terms of frequency. Each overtone (overtone

0 being the fundamental) is divided into 12

semitones: C, C# (“C-sharp”), D, D#, E, F, F#,

G, G#, A, A#, and B. The semitones increase

by the ratio 12:2, or 1.05946. Musical notes

(tones) are the measure of pitch and are

expressed using both the semitone and the

overtone, such as A3, G#4, D6, A#1, and E2.

(frequency in hertz and rounded off)

Overtone

C

C#

D

D#

E

F

0

16.4

17.3

18.4

19.4

20.6

21.8

1

32.7

34.6

36.7

38.9

41.2

45.7

2

65.4

69.3

73.4

77.8

82.4

87.3

3

130

139

147

156

165

175

4

262

278

294

311

330

349

5

523

554

587

622

659

698

6

1047 1109 1174 1245 1319 1397

7

2093 2217 2344 2489 2637 2794

8

4186 4435 4698 4978 5274 5588

9

8372 8870 9397 9956 10548 11175

Overtone F#

G

G#

A

A#

B

0

23.1

24.5

26.0

27.5

29.1

30.9

1

46.2

49.0

51.9

55.0

58.3

61.7

2

92.5

98.0

104

110

117

123

3

185

196

208

220

233

247

4

370

392

415

440

466

494

5

740

784

831

880

932

988

6

1480 1568 1661 1760 1865 1976

7

2960 3136 3322 3520 3729 3951

8

5920 6271 6645 7040 7459 7902

9

11840 12542 13290 14080 14917 15804

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