Before plucking there should be no sound (no note); right after plucking it, there is.
Before plucking there should be no sound (no note); right after plucking it, there is.
Yes, if the band is more stretched than the previous time it was plucked, you would expect a higher note.
longer I disagree: The length of the rubber band is not the important factor, if both rubber bands are at rest, both will produce lower or no notes. Both bands may be stretched to produce the same note - its a matter of the amount of tension required to reach the same frequency of vibration (CPS). The point, or moment, of elastic failure, i.e., "how far can you stretch it to produce notes before the band breaks is a limiting factor. Another factor is the sounding board or medium used to amplify the vibration, and what kind of material or device is used to hold and stretch the bands, and how precise the 'stretching' can be controlled. All of these may change both the quality, timbre, and audible volume of either band. The key really is the number of cycles per second of vibration: A-440 on the shorter band is the same as A-440 on the longer band, but they have to be stretched different lengths to produce the same tension in the material to achieve the same cycles per second. Finally, the shorter rubber band will require a more 'flimsy' sounding board and finer control, while the longer rubber band may well be more controllable over the frequency spectrum. If we are only talking about vibrating ambient air, the pitch will be affected by temperature, humidity and barometric pressure, since it is the medium through which the sound must travel.
Yes. Acceleration is the change in velocity, and velocity is a vector, which means it has direction. Because an object undergoing uniform circular motion is changing direction, it is changing velocity, and thus, accelerating.
When the loudness of a note increases, the perceived pitch does not change. However, if the loudness of a note decreases significantly, it may start to sound quieter and could appear to lose its pitch as it becomes less audible. Nevertheless, the actual pitch of the note remains the same.
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Before plucking there should be no sound (no note); right after plucking it, there is.
are there changes in the note when you plucked the stretch band
Yes, if the band is more stretched than the previous time it was plucked, you would expect a higher note.
I believe it is the pitch that changes when the loudness of a note changes
C-Note - band - was created in 1997.
The band 'The Note' is a three men Pop band based in Thailand. Their current band members are as follows: Nu (bass), Oliver (vocals) and Joey (guitar).
The convention for a guitar slide is to draw a straight line from the head of the starting to the head of the ending note. The duration of the slide is indicated by the starting note. The ending note indicates how long to hold the final note at the end of the slide. Usually, the ending note of the slide is plucked separately. If not, put parentheses around the ending note in the notation. Some guitarists refer to the slide as a "glissando", but the glissando mark is used to mean that every interim note in the slide should be plucked in rapid succession.
It doesnt
An ukulele has four strings. Each string makes a separate note when plucked without pressing a fret.
Stretch it tighter - the higher the tension on a drum head, the higher a percussive note it will sound.
the note from homecoming