Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
hi, i thought this might be a good place to post my query, if not
please direct me to a more suitable place lol. ok my question - i've got to write an essay on "Wave Theory, Harmonics & Acoustic Phenomena". ok so i've basically said that all sounds are made up front a collection of sine waves, the most basic sound wave .. i've then said that tehre must be something differentiating between sine waves and the more complex sounds we here (such as speech etc.) i've then said that tehre can be some differential between waves - that is to say amplitude and frequency have a part to play in varying a sound. but that can only go so far as to give us different pitch and volume loudness (are you still with me? is this making any sense lol!?!) so i want to then go on to explain about fouriers theorum - but what is the theory behind harmonic content - who thought of it etc. ? i hope i haven't made people too confused lol any comments or answers would be great thanks alternatively you can e-mail me at Thanks a load in advance cya adam |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Adam wrote: hi, i thought this might be a good place to post my query, if not please direct me to a more suitable place lol. ok my question - i've got to write an essay on "Wave Theory, Harmonics & Acoustic Phenomena". ok so i've basically said that all sounds are made up front a collection of sine waves, the most basic sound wave .. i've then said that tehre must be something differentiating between sine waves and the more complex sounds we here (such as speech etc.) i've then said that tehre can be some differential between waves - that is to say amplitude and frequency have a part to play in varying a sound. but that can only go so far as to give us different pitch and volume loudness (are you still with me? is this making any sense lol!?!) so i want to then go on to explain about fouriers theorum - but what is the theory behind harmonic content - who thought of it etc. ? i hope i haven't made people too confused lol More complex sounds can all be considered as a series of different sine waves mixed together. There is a Schaum's Outline on the Fourier theorem. The basic notion of representing any function as a series of sines is due to Fourier, but it was more or less forgotten. Oliver Heaviside in the 19th century came up with the same basic notion, and developed a very clumsy notation to describe waveforms in terms of their individual sine components. By the 1920s, the Fourier series had been rediscovered and Fourier's notation was being used. Occasionally I will see old papers using the Heaviside calculus and it is very clear why it got replaced. I think there is some discussion of this in the MIT Press book on the history of electric power distribution. Understanding AC power line waveform distortion was a huge application of this theory and it was a huge advance toward understanding some of the problems that kept AC power from being popular in the early electrical era. Some discussion of this is in Helmholtz's 19th century book _On the Sensation Of Tone_ but without much mathematical background. He makes it clear that additional waves being added together change the tone color of the fundamental but he doesn't discuss the reduction process of breaking a complex wave down. He does discuss the process of additive synthesis (as used in pipe organs). --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Paul Stamler wrote:
You might look for a copy of Arthur Benade's "Horns, Strings and Harmony". It covers a lot of this territory (along with some very cool information on why woodwinds are so weird). I second this suggestion. This slim but highly informative book is still in print as an Anchor Doubleday paperback, and is well worth a afternoon's reading. I'm grateful that the local public library in my home town of New Castle, Pa. had a copy of it 40 years ago. If every musician and recording engineer knew what is shown so clearly in that book, we would all understand each other a lot better, I think. |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Paul Stamler wrote:
You might look for a copy of Arthur Benade's "Horns, Strings and Harmony". It covers a lot of this territory (along with some very cool information on why woodwinds are so weird). I second this suggestion. This slim but highly informative book is still in print as an Anchor Doubleday paperback, and is well worth a afternoon's reading. I'm grateful that the local public library in my home town of New Castle, Pa. had a copy of it 40 years ago. If every musician and recording engineer knew what is shown so clearly in that book, we would all understand each other a lot better, I think. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Powerful Argument in Favor of Agnosticism and Athetism | Audio Opinions | |||
How do I encode Voice and Music Content with Windows Media Audio 9 Voice | Pro Audio | |||
2nd, 3rd harmonic distortion | Pro Audio | |||
2nd, 3rd harmonic distortion | Pro Audio | |||
2nd, 3rd harmonic distortion | Pro Audio |