If two notes are simultaneously played, with frequency
ratios that are simple fractions (e.g. , , or ), the composite wave is still periodic, with a short period – and the combination sounds
consonant. For instance, a note vibrating at 200
Hz and a note vibrating at 300 Hz (a
perfect fifth, or above 200 Hz) add together to make a wave that repeats at 100 Hz: Every of a second, the 300 Hz wave repeats three times and the 200 Hz wave repeats twice. Note that the
combined wave repeats at 100 Hz, even though there is no actual 100 Hz sinusoidal component contributed by an individual sound source. Additionally, the two notes from acoustical instruments will have overtone partials that will include many that share the same frequency. For instance, a note with the frequency of its fundamental harmonic at 200
Hz can have harmonic overtones at: 400, 600, 800, , , , , , ...
Hz. A note with fundamental frequency of 300 Hz can have overtones at: 600, 900, , , , ...
Hz. The two notes share harmonics at 600, , and more that coincide with each other, further along in the each series. Although the mechanism of human hearing that accomplishes it is still incompletely understood, practical musical observations for nearly The combination of composite waves with short fundamental frequencies and shared or closely related partials is what causes the sensation of harmony: When two frequencies are near to a simple fraction, but not exact, the composite wave cycles slowly enough to hear the cancellation of the waves as a steady pulsing instead of a tone. This is called
beating, and is considered unpleasant, or
dissonant. The frequency of beating is calculated as the difference between the frequencies of the two notes. When two notes are close in pitch they beat slowly enough that a human can measure the frequency
difference by ear, with a
stopwatch; beat timing is how tuning pianos, harps, and
harpsichords to complicated
temperaments was managed before affordable
tuning meters. • For the example above, • As another example from
modulation theory, a combination of and would beat once per second, since The difference between consonance and dissonance is not clearly defined, but the higher the beat frequency, the more likely the interval is dissonant.
Helmholtz proposed that maximum dissonance would arise between two pure tones when the beat rate is roughly 35 Hz. ==Scales==