One of the simplest cases to visualise is a
vibrating string, as in the illustration; the string has fixed points at each end, and each harmonic
mode divides it into an integer number (1, 2, 3, 4, etc.) of equal-sized sections resonating at increasingly higher frequencies. Similar arguments apply to vibrating air columns in
wind instruments (for example, "the French
horn was originally a valveless instrument that could play only the notes of the harmonic series"), although these are complicated by having the possibility of anti-nodes (that is, the air column is closed at one end and open at the other),
conical as opposed to
cylindrical bores, or end-openings that run the
gamut from no flare, cone flare, or exponentially shaped flares (such as in various bells). In most pitched musical instruments, the fundamental (first harmonic) is accompanied by other, higher-frequency harmonics. Thus shorter-wavelength, higher-frequency
waves occur with varying prominence and give each instrument its characteristic
tone quality. The fact that a string is fixed at each end means that the longest allowed wavelength on the string (which gives the fundamental frequency) is twice the length of the string (one round trip, with a half cycle fitting between the nodes at the two ends). Other allowed wavelengths are reciprocal multiples (e.g. , , times) that of the fundamental. Theoretically, these shorter wavelengths correspond to
vibrations at frequencies that are integer multiples of (e.g. 2, 3, 4 times) the fundamental frequency. Physical characteristics of the vibrating medium and/or the resonator it vibrates against often alter these frequencies. (See
inharmonicity and
stretched tuning for alterations specific to wire-stringed instruments and certain
electric pianos.) However, those alterations are small, and except for precise, highly specialized tuning, it is reasonable to think of the frequencies of the harmonic series as integer multiples of the fundamental frequency. The harmonic series is an
arithmetic progression (
f, 2
f, 3
f, 4
f, 5
f, ...). In terms of frequency (measured in
cycles per second, or
hertz, where
f is the fundamental frequency), the difference between consecutive harmonics is therefore constant and equal to the fundamental. But because human ears respond to sound
nonlinearly, higher harmonics are perceived as "closer together" than lower ones. On the other hand, the
octave series is a
geometric progression (2
f, 4
f, 8
f, 16
f, ...), and people perceive these distances as "
the same" in the sense of
musical interval. In terms of what one hears, each successively higher
octave in the harmonic series is divided into increasingly "smaller" and more numerous intervals. The second harmonic, whose frequency is twice the fundamental, sounds an octave higher; the third harmonic, three times the frequency of the fundamental, sounds a
perfect fifth above the second harmonic. The fourth harmonic vibrates at four times the frequency of the fundamental and sounds a
perfect fourth above the third harmonic (two octaves above the fundamental). Double the harmonic number means double the frequency (which sounds an octave higher). – from
equal temperament (rounded to the nearest integer). Blue notes are very flat and red notes are very sharp. Listeners accustomed to more
tonal tuning, such as
meantone and
well temperaments, notice many other notes are "off". by
Ben Johnston harmonics".
Marin Mersenne wrote: "The order of the Consonances is natural, and ... the way we count them, starting from unity up to the number six and beyond is founded in nature." However, to quote
Carl Dahlhaus, "the interval-distance of the natural-tone-row
[overtones] [...], counting up to 20, includes everything from the octave to the quarter tone, (and) useful and useless musical tones. The natural-tone-row [harmonic series] justifies everything, that means, nothing." == Harmonics and tuning ==