When you strike a piano key, a felt hammer excites a complex set of waves that travel along a musical wire to the piano’s bridge and soundboard. Surprisingly, not all of those waves are the expected transverse variety; two kinds of longitudinal waves also propagate and have been studied, though with little empirical input, for at least 20 years. Free-response longitudinal waves arise from the local increase in tension caused by the wire’s elongation, and they have frequencies determined by the length of the wire and its speed of sound. More interesting are the forced-response longitudinal waves, induced by nonlinear mixing of transverse waves; they occur with significant audible power at frequencies that don’t correspond to transverse overtones. Recognizing that theory needs experiment, Thomas Moore of Rollins College in Florida and two of his undergraduate students, Nikki Etchenique (now graduated) and Samantha Collin, simplified the complexities of a real piano....
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1 July 2015
July 01 2015
Longitudinal waves in piano strings
Stephen G. Benka
Physics Today 68 (7), 16 (2015);
Citation
Stephen G. Benka; Longitudinal waves in piano strings. Physics Today 1 July 2015; 68 (7): 16. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.2838
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