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[[Category:Commas named after their interval size]] |
Latest revision as of 07:02, 3 November 2024
Interval information |
augmented comma,
enharmonic diesis,
enharmonic comma
Trigu comma
reduced subharmonic
The 41.059-cent interval of 128/125 is called the diesis or augmented comma; it represents the gap between a stack of three 5/4 just major thirds and the octave, or in other words 2/(5/4)3.
Approximations
This interval is fairly accurately represented by a single step in 28-, 31- or 34edo, and by two steps of 53-, 59- or 65edo. In any tuning with pure octaves and just major thirds, such as quarter-comma meantone, it will be exact. Furthermore, in meantone it appears as the difference between sharps and flats, e.g. between D# and Eb. It is also called enharmonic diesis or enharmonic comma for this reason.
Temperaments
As a comma
Tempering out this comma leads to augmented temperament. See augmented family for the family where it is tempered out.
As an interval
If the diesis is treated as a musical interval in its own right as opposed to tempering it out, it is approximately a quarter-tone and so can be used to introduce 7-limit and 11-limit harmony into 5-limit scales.
Trivia
This interval represents the amount by which the binary definition of kilobyte, 1024 bytes, exceeds the nominal definition of "kilo" prefix, 1000.
See also
- Diesis (disambiguation page)