Standing waves - which instruments are closed-closed, open-open, or open-closed?

In summary, the concept of determining whether an instrument is closed-closed, open-open, or closed-open.ie. a flute, guitar, sax, oboe, clarinet. For example, is a clarinet a closed-open instrument because your mouth covers the entire mouth piece and the flute is open-open because your mouth doesn't? Clarinets are closed-closed. Wind instruments are a little more complicated, but in the case of the clarinet, it is a cylindrical bore, and behaves like a standard "closed" pipe. It only produces odd harmonics (f, 3f, 5f etc) and has a fundamental frequency with a wavelength 4 times the length of the tube.
  • #1
ben.tien
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Homework Statement


Okay. So I'm sort of confused about the concept of determining whether an instrument is closed-closed, open-open, or closed-open.ie. a flute, guitar, sax, oboe, clarinet. For example, is a clarinet a closed-open instrument because your mouth covers the entire mouth piece and the flute is open-open because your mouth doesn't? What are ways one can use to determine this? Thanks in advance.

Homework Equations


fn = v(n/2L) n = 1,2,3,...
fn = v(n/4L) n = 1,3,5,...


The Attempt at a Solution

 
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  • #2
I take it you are happy with stringed instruments. They are clearly all "closed" at both ends. This means the standing wave pattern has a node at both ends, and the fundamental frequency has a wavelength twice the length of the string. The string is able to produce all the harmonics in the series f, 2f, 3f, etc.
With wind instruments it gets a little complicated.
A flute is open at both ends and produces a full set of harmonics. There is an antinode at both ends and the fundamental frequency has a wavelength twice the length of the tube.
Reed instruments (clarinet, oboe, bassoon, oboe etc) are closed at one end and open at the other. This means there is a node at the closed end and an antinode at the open end.
In the case of the clarinet, it is a cylindrical bore, and behaves like a standard "closed" pipe. It only produces odd harmonics (f, 3f, 5f etc) and has a fundamental frequency with a wavelength 4 times the length of the tube.
The other instruments have a conical bore. This complicates the maths a bit, but the result is that the sound that comes out contains the full set of harmonics.
There is a good treatment of this on this page and the various links from it. (It also deals with brass and other instruments)
It is very informative.
http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/woodwind.html
 
  • #3
Thank you very much!
 

1. What is a standing wave?

A standing wave is a pattern of vibration that occurs when a wave reflects off of a fixed boundary, creating a stable interference pattern.

2. Which instruments create closed-closed standing waves?

Instruments with both ends that are fixed, such as a guitar string or organ pipe, create closed-closed standing waves.

3. What are examples of open-open standing wave instruments?

Instruments with both ends that are open, like a flute or clarinet, create open-open standing waves.

4. How do instruments with one end fixed and one end open create standing waves?

Instruments with one end fixed and one end open, such as a trumpet or trombone, create open-closed standing waves. The open end acts as a fixed boundary, while the closed end allows for reflection and creates the standing wave pattern.

5. How do standing waves affect the sound produced by an instrument?

Standing waves can affect the tuning and resonance of an instrument, as well as the quality and timbre of the sound produced. Properly controlling standing waves is an important aspect of instrument design and construction.

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