harmonic
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
harmonic 1 Physical term describing the vibration in segments of a sound-producing body (see sound ). A string vibrates simultaneously in its whole length and in segments of halves, thirds, fourths, etc. These segments form what is known in algebra as a harmonic series or progression, since the rate of vibration of each segment is an integral multiple of the frequency of the whole string, i.e., each segment vibrates respectively twice, three times, four times, etc., as fast as the whole string. The vibration of the whole string produces the fundamental tone, and the segments produce weaker subsidiary tones. A similar phenomenon occurs in an air column in a pipe. At most the first 16 tones in such a series can be heard by the human ear; the character or timbre of a fundamental tone is determined by the number of its subsidiary tones heard and their relative intensity. The subsidiary tones have been loosely called harmonics (as a noun), but they are properly called partials, the fundamental tone being the first partial. They are also called overtones (a synonym for "upper partials" ), although this term includes a number of sounds that do not fit in with the harmonic series, and are therefore not considered musical. 2 Term describing the silvery sound produced separately when the fundamental and possibly more partial tones are damped by touching a string at a nodal point. Similarly harmonics are produced separately in an air column by overblowing or in brass wind instruments by the use of valves.
Author not available, HARMONIC.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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harmonic
A Dictionary of Psychology
harmonic n. A component of a complex tone , having a frequency that is an integral multiple of the fundamental frequency . The first harmonic is the fundamental tone; the second harmonic, also called the first overtone, has twice the frequency of the fundamental and is therefore an ...
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harmonic motion
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... single object vibrating in this manner is said to exhibit simple harmonic motion (SHM). More complex harmonic motion can be analyzed as combinations of two or more simple harmonic motions. Examples of objects whose motion approximates SHM are ...
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harmonic mean
A Dictionary of Psychology
harmonic mean n. In descriptive statistics, the average value of a set of scores calculated by taking the reciprocal of the arithmetic ... scores. The scores 3, 4, 5 have reciprocal 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, and the arithmetic mean of these reciprocals is 0.261, so the harmonic mean of the set of scores is 1/0.261 = 3.831 ... .
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aural harmonic
A Dictionary of Psychology
aural harmonic n. A harmonic generated by the auditory system.
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simple harmonic motion
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
see harmonic motion .
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