The most popular tuning for guitar is(from highest to lowest string):
e' = 329.6 Hz,
b = 246.9 Hz,
g = 196.0 Hz,
d = 146.8 Hz,
A = 110.0 Hz,
E = 82.4 Hz.
That depends on the guitar! On a Tenor guitar there are four strings, on a standard guitar there are six strings, and there are twelve strings on a twelve string guitar.
Thinner
there are six strings on a guitar
It sounds hard and tight
A normal Acoustic/Electric guitar has 6 strings, and a normal bass guitar has 4 strings. There are also guitars with more strings, i.e. a bass guitar with 5 strings.
Frequency.
That depends on the guitar! On a Tenor guitar there are four strings, on a standard guitar there are six strings, and there are twelve strings on a twelve string guitar.
Lower frequency means lower "pitch". Higher frequency means higher "pitch".The left end of the piano keyboard, the thicker guitar strings, the tuba, the voice of a lion, distant thunder, are all low frequencies.The right end of the keyboard, the thinner guitar strings, the flute, the voice of a kitten or mouse, are all high frequencies. Frequency has nothing to do with how loud the sound is, only how high or low its pitch is.
Thinner
there are six strings on a guitar
It sounds hard and tight
A normal Acoustic/Electric guitar has 6 strings, and a normal bass guitar has 4 strings. There are also guitars with more strings, i.e. a bass guitar with 5 strings.
the strings on a base guitar are the same as the top four strings on a guitar which are E A D G
The guitar strings vibrate.Kinetic is the energy of a moving object so it would be the strings cause the strings of the guitar moves.
A guitar has 6 strings. The vast majority of normal bass guitars only have 4, all of which produce lower tones.
In my opinion, electric guitar strings gets out of tune faster because the strings are not as thick as acoustic guitar strings. So, thicker strings make it stay in tune longer.
Tightening the strings increases the pitch, loosening them lowers it. This is because you are changing the length of the string as you turn the tuning pegs.