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A typical piano has a range of at least 7 octaves; for comparison, the range of human hearing is about 10 octaves.
piano and violine
there are an infinite range of frequencies limited only by the mechanical limitations of the medium creating and transferring it.
Hearing Range of frequencies for humar ears if from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz.
No frequencies in that range appear on the list you provided with the question.
they use frequencies in uhf range since animals dont make those sounds
The MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) system has nothing to do with the range of frequencies. MIDI is a method of communicating between various musical controllers, such as keyboards, and generators, such as synthesizers. The synthesizer is what actually generates the frequency. The MIDI system is simply the messaging subsystem. Think of it this way - one parallel to MIDI is a player piano roll.
No. We had a piano which had a range of six and a half octaves.
Infrasounds (frequencies under 20 kHz)
Different frequencies, like the different positions of the keys on a piano have different frequencies. The winding of an electromagnetic produces different frequencies at different levels, But we do not have any equipment to measure frequencies that small
A band-pass filter blocks or attenuates frequencies outside of a certain range, while it accepts frequencies from within that range. The range of frequencies it will accept is determined by its Q-factor. A filter with a high Q-factor will have a narrow range of accepted frequencies, whereas a filter with a low Q-factor will have a wide range of accepted frequencies.
Sound waves with frequencies above the normal human range of hearing are called ultrasoundUltrasoundUltrasonic for frequencies higher than a human can hear, and infrasonic for those frequencies below the human threshold of hearing.