An octave is made up of notes spanning from A to G, from one A to the next A is an octave, and the word 'noat' is spelled 'note'.
It is called an scale. No it's not. It's called an octave..
To determine how many years 1 cm represents on a specific scale, you would need to know the total time span that the scale covers in relation to its total length in centimeters. For example, if a scale covers 100 years and is 10 cm long, then 1 cm would represent 10 years. You can calculate this by dividing the total years by the total centimeters of the scale.
Celsius degrees are larger than Fahrenheit degrees, by a factor of 9/5 = 1.8. It only takes 100 degC to span the temperature difference between freezing and boiling water, while it takes 212 - 32 = 180 degF to span the same temperature difference.
20
A span is 8" or 0.67 foot. That is an informal measurement from the tip of the thumb to the tip of the pinkie on a average spread hand.
It is called an scale. No it's not. It's called an octave..
This would be a chromatic scale. In this scale, the octave is divided into semitones - twelve in total - and each semitone is played in succession.
Octave
an octave is a sound ratio An octave is a span of eight diatonic notes in music. In other words, it is the same note played seven full notes higher or lower.
4.6 billion years
an eight note scale.-----------------------------The term "octave" refers to the distance (interval) between one note and the very next note with the same name. For example, from Middle C up to Treble C is one octave. Since there are seven different white-key notes (A, B, C, D, E, F and G) on the piano, if you go from one A to the very next A up or down the piano keyboard, it will be a span of 8 keys (inclusive).When you play octaves on the piano, you are only playing two notes at a time. (Treble E and High E, Bass F and Low F, Middle C and Treble C, etc.) However, one octave of a scale refers to a series of 8 notes (if by scale, you mean the diatonic Major and minor scales). For example, one octave of the C Major scale would be C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C; one octave of the E natural minor scale would be E, F#, G, A, B, C, D, E; and so on.
The Earth's geologic time scale spans about 4.6 billion years, from the formation of the Earth to the present day.
Strictly speaking, only the "oct" (which is the root of the word "octave") means eight. For example, an Octagon is a figure with eight sides, an octopus has eight tentacles, etc. (October was originally the eighth month of the year; however, two other months were added to our modern calendar so now, October is the tenth month and December is the twelfth month even though the root of its name means ten!)The term "octave" refers to the distance (interval) between one note and the very next note with the same name. For example, from Middle C up to Treble C is one octave. Since there are seven different white-key notes (A, B, C, D, E, F and G) on the piano, if you go from one A to the very next A up or down the piano keyboard, it will be a span of 8 keys (inclusive).When you play octaves on the piano, you are only playing two notes at a time. (Treble E and High E, Bass F and Low F, Middle C and Treble C, etc.) However, one octave of a scale refers to a series of 8 notes (if by scale, you mean the diatonic Major and minor scales). For example, one octave of the C Major scale would be C, D, E, F, G, A, B, C; one octave of the E natural minor scale would be E, F#, G, A, B, C, D, E; and so on.
To determine how many years 1 cm represents on a specific scale, you would need to know the total time span that the scale covers in relation to its total length in centimeters. For example, if a scale covers 100 years and is 10 cm long, then 1 cm would represent 10 years. You can calculate this by dividing the total years by the total centimeters of the scale.
16 oxen are in a span
It's possible that you mean a half-step. There is one half-step between d and d sharp, for example. I believe you are thinking of an octave. An octave is a span of eight notes, so for example, from one A note to the next A note would be A-B-C-D-E-F-G-A, or eight notes, an octave.
If you define the electromagnetic spectrum to begin at 60 KHz ... the radiofrequency used to distribute the signals that synchronize your "atomic" clock ...and end with gamma rays at 1019 Hz, you've defined a frequency span ofabout 47 octaves.Out of that span, roughly ONE octave is visible to human eyes.