Beat (acoustics)/Amplitude beats

Beat (acoustics)   /Phase beats   /Literature search   /Just fifth displace stretch   /Exact phase beats   /Differential equations   subpages   drafts  

Overtones are associated with the harmonics of a guitar or violin string
Simple beat pattern between two sinusoidals with slightly different frequencies
The sum of five waves can approximate a sawtooth in this finite Fourier series.

Prerequisite skills for this lesson

edit

This is an advance resource that requires proficiency in a wide variety of subjects. The following terms are fully discussed in these Wikipedia articles:

  • Beat usually refers to an interference pattern between two sounds of slightly different frequencies, perceived as a periodic variation in volume whose rate is the difference of the two frequencies. Here we extend this definition to include the case where the difference in pitches is not small, but instead have a ratio of frequencies differs slightly from that of just intonation.
  • An Interval is a difference in pitch between two sounds.
  • Just intonation is the tuning of musical intervals as whole number ratios (such as 3:2 or 4:3) of frequencies.
  • A Harmonic is a wave with a frequency that is a positive integer multiple of the fundamental frequency, the frequency of the original periodic signal, such as a sinusoidal wave. The original signal is also called the 1st harmonic, the other harmonics are known as higher harmonics. As all harmonics are periodic at the fundamental frequency, the sum of harmonics is also periodic at that frequency. The set of harmonics forms a harmonic series.
  • A Fourier series: is a summation of harmonically related sinusoidal functions, also known as components or harmonics.

Lots and Stone suggest that the mechanism by which beats can be heard between two notes of a consonant interval is not fully understood.[1][2] In fact, beats associated with musical notes actually sung or played on an instrument exhibit complexities that render them difficult to mathematically model. A commonly used simplification called Fourier analysis has permitted some progress to be made. On this page we introduce Fourier analysis and explain how it can explain beats between consonant musical intervals using an argument similar to that proposed by Helmholtz in 1877.[1] The mathematical justification for this Helmholtz model for beats is based on the well known and easily understood amplitude beats that occur between two sinusoidal waves of nearly equal frequency.[3]

Derivation of amplitude beats among harmonics

edit
     
301 200
400
602 600 2
800
903 1000
1204 1200 4
1400
1505 1600
1806 1800 6
Table 2 Beats

Let p and q be relatively prime integers, and suppose one of the frequencies is slightly detuned, for example, with   and  . Let the integers,   a matching pair of harmonics with nearly equal frequency, so that   Since our goal is to find the set of all such nearly matching pairs  . In the limit of very slow beats, we may drop the inequalities, so that dividing by   yields:   The most obvious such match occurs when,    .  Define   as the most lowest patching pair (assuming   and   are relatively prime.) This yields:

     (for  )

The beating is between   and   Now define   to be a slightly from   Use the fact that   to obtain   To first order, we can combine both effects if   is also detuned (note that when both notes in an exactly tuned interval are detuned by the same factor, the interval is still exactly tuned.) This explains the minus sign in:

 , where  
  is informal set theory notation for   is a positive integer.

Examples

edit

Why these intervals were selected

edit
 
Rational Fraction Figure: The more consonant just intervals tend to be in the upper left corner.
 
Played above a piano's C, the notes and frequency ratios are corresponding notes are: (6/5, 5/4, 4/3, 3/2, 8/5, 5/3) and (E♭, E, F, G, A♭, A), respectively.

Here we examine plots for three just intervals:
perfect fifth (3:2 ratio)
minor sixth (8:5 ratio)
tritone (7:5 ratio)[4]

These intervals were selected because all are within a half-step of the perfect fifth, which might facilitate comparison of graphical representation of intervals with entirely different natures. Figure 4 establishes the fifth (3:2) as the most fundamental consonant interval between the unison and the octave. The figure is taken from a proof of the countability of rational numbers, modified to include only fractions between 1 and 2, with ratios that are not prime written in red. The smaller integers tend to occupy the upper left hand corner, where ratios associated with consonant intervals can be found.

Hearing the beats

edit

All files play the beat at 90 beats per minute and are arranged in 3/4 time:

  1. Four bars with no metronome: Listen for the beats
  2. Four bars with metronome. Think: click-2-3 | 2-2-3 | 3-2-3 | 4-2-3
  3. Four bars with no metronome. Count: rest-2-3 | 2-2-3 | 3-2-3 | 4-2-3
  4. One bar with metronome. Listen: click-2-3

The challenge occurs at step 3: Try to count the beats as if they were a four measure rest in a waltz. If you are the clicker, you would come on the first beat of the fifth bar after that rest. After a while you might be able to start counting at the beginning. Think of yourself as a clicker, who has four bars of rest, four bars of clicks, four bars of rest, and one bar of clicks.

Caption text
interval Frequencies ogg file wav file
Fifth 300.0-200.25
Maj 6th 333.333-200.3
Fourth 266.667-200.188
Maj 3rd 250.0-200.15
min 6th 320.0-200.094
min 3rd 240.0-200.125
Tritone 280.0-200.214
  1. 1.0 1.1 Shapira Lots, Inbal, and Lewi Stone. "Perception of musical consonance and dissonance: an outcome of neural synchronization." Journal of the Royal Society Interface 5.29 (2008): 1429-1434. Available as pdf and HTML
  2. Trulla, Lluis L., Nicola Di Stefano, and Alessandro Giuliani. "Computational approach to musical consonance and dissonance." Frontiers in Psychology 9 (2018): 381.
  3. Subpages to this resource are devoted to one of many alternative explanation for beats produced by a consonant musical interval. This effort involves the evolving phase difference between signals when their pitches do not precisely match the ratio of two prime numbers associated with a just consonant interval. The possibility that humans can detect these phase differences is only one of many explanations that have been suggested to explain beats in consonant intervals. The efforts outlined in this resource's subpages are currently under construction, and there are no useful results to report.
  4. There are many alternative rational fractions associated with a just tritone: 64/45 involves only the small integers (2,3,5), and 729/512 involves only 2 and 3. Moreover, each tritone ratio comes in pairs: Since the equal tempered tritone's ratio is,  , we know that if   is an appropriate ratio, then so is  .