Exploring Complex Waves and their Harmonics

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Complex waves in musical instruments produce not only the fundamental frequency but also various harmonics due to the broad spectrum of frequencies generated when a string is plucked or an air column is blown. The resonant cavity of the instrument, such as the body of a guitar or the tube of a wind instrument, plays a crucial role in amplifying these harmonics. The shape, material, and construction of the resonant cavity determine which harmonics are produced, contributing to the unique sound quality of each instrument. When a string is displaced, it excites multiple vibrating modes, including higher-order harmonics, while techniques like artificial harmonics can selectively excite specific modes. Understanding these principles reveals why musical instruments create rich, complex sounds beyond just the fundamental frequency.
Cheman
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Complex waves...

I have learned that with a musical instrument you set up standing waves of the fundamental frequency as well as other harmonics which cause the specific "quality" of the sound - my question is why do you produce different harmonics and not just the fundamental frequency? When you pluck a string or blow an air column why do you not just produce one wave? eg - the fundamental frequency?

Thanks. :-)
 
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You drive the instruments with a broad spectrum source (plucking, e.g., is not monochromatic!) so a broad range of frequencies are present at the outset.
 
Please could people explain and elaborate? :rolleyes:
 
if you look at any musical instrument out there, you will notice that all of them have some for of resonant cavity. For stringed instruments like violins and guitars and pianos, this is the body of the instrument. For wind instruments, this is the tube form of the instrument.

The standing wave vibrations you produce at the source (reed, string, whistle) are transmitted to the body which resonate at their particular frequencies. this is where many of the subharmonics that produce the tones and depth characteristic of different instruments come from.

The harmonics produced depend on the shape, material and construction of the resonant cavity.
 
I think one easy way of visualizing it is as follow. Take a guitar for instance, you pluck it by quickly displacing and releasing the string. Now the shape of the displaced string will have certain overlap with the fundamental vibrating mode, so some energy goes into this mode, and the same goes for higher order modes as well. So a large family of modes is excited by plucking.
However, you can also selectively excite a smaller family of modes as well, this is how artificial harmonic works in guitar and violin. For example by gently touching the middle point of a guitar/violin string when you pluck, you essentially introduce a node to that point by restraining it from vibrating. In this case only those vibrating modes with a node at the middle of the string will get excited.
 
I'm not a student or graduate in Astrophysics.. Wish i were though... I was playing with distances between planets... I found that Mars, Ceres, Jupiter and Saturn have somthing in common... They are in a kind of ratio with another.. They all got a difference about 1,84 to 1,88x the distance from the previous planet, sub-planet. On average 1,845x. I thought this can be coincidential. So i took the big moons of Jupiter and Saturn to do the same thing jupiter; Io, Europa and Ganymede have a...

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