Well actually, thereisn't any vibrating. When you blow through the emboucer the air hits the keys. You would look at it like blowing into different bottle where each one is filled with more beans or water
There is no 'vibrating part' in a Flute. The air blown across the hole on the mouthpiece simply circulates inside the tube of the instrument. Closing and opening the fingerholes varies the length of the flute's tube - creating the various tones.
The main thing that vibrates is the column of air inside the flute. Air has mass and is elastic, so a column of air vibrates easily at a frequency set by the length.
The air inside the flute going through different tubes.
Actually, to make vibrato on the flute you have to move your lips. To make it sound pretty and professional.
There is no part of the flute that vibrates. The sound is caused by the column of air in the flute vibrating.
mouth piece
Believe it or not, the air.
Air moves through the flute, bouncing off the sides.
Flute, piccolo, bass flute, nose flute, etc.
he reed that you blow on the inside part of it vibrates
When you blow across the embouchure hole, the air that goes inside the flute vibrates. When you open a hole, the air is released from being trapped in the flute and goes out of that way. the air that vibrates is sometimes called the air-spring, and the shorter it is,the higher it is.
Believe it or not, the air.
Air moves through the flute, bouncing off the sides.
Flute, piccolo, bass flute, nose flute, etc.
he reed that you blow on the inside part of it vibrates
nothing - it is the same principle like in Okarina
The column of air within the flute vibrates as the player causes turbulence by blowing across the mouthpiece.
When you blow across the embouchure hole, the air that goes inside the flute vibrates. When you open a hole, the air is released from being trapped in the flute and goes out of that way. the air that vibrates is sometimes called the air-spring, and the shorter it is,the higher it is.
Air particles vibrate and cause a chain reaction making the vibrations spread, which eventually reaches your ears and your ear drum vibrates, causing you to hear it.
Air moves through the Flute, bouncing off the sides.
The string of a veena vibrates
The skin vibrates when you hit them.
The reed on a clarinet vibrates against the mouthpiece.