7/5: Difference between revisions

From Xenharmonic Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Xenwolf (talk | contribs)
switched to infobox interval
Xenwolf (talk | contribs)
consistent parameter order in Template:Infobox Interval
Line 2: Line 2:
| Icon = [[File:ji_glyph_7_5.png|alt=ji glyph 7 5.png|147x116px|ji glyph 7 5.png]] <br/> <small>JI glyph for 7/5</small>
| Icon = [[File:ji_glyph_7_5.png|alt=ji glyph 7 5.png|147x116px|ji glyph 7 5.png]] <br/> <small>JI glyph for 7/5</small>
| Ratio = 7/5
| Ratio = 7/5
| Monzo = 0 0 -1 1
| Cents = 582.51219  
| Cents = 582.51219  
| Monzo = 0 0 -1 1
| Name = Huygens tritone
| Name = Huygens tritone
| Sound = jid_7_5_pluck_adu_dr220.mp3
| Sound = jid_7_5_pluck_adu_dr220.mp3

Revision as of 14:39, 11 October 2018

Interval information
Ratio 7/5
Factorization 5-1 × 7
Monzo [0 0 -1 1
Size in cents 582.5122¢
Name Huygens tritone
FJS name [math]\displaystyle{ \text{d5}^{7}_{5} }[/math]
Special properties reduced
Tenney norm (log2 nd) 5.12928
Weil norm (log2 max(n, d)) 5.61471
Wilson norm (sopfr(nd)) 12

[sound info]
Open this interval in xen-calc

In 7-limit Just Intonation, 7/5 is a narrow tritone measuring about 582.5¢. It is a noticeable 17.5¢ away from the 600¢ half-octave (square root of 2) tritone of 12edo and every even-numbered EDO. It represents the difference between 7/4 and 5/4.

7/5 is notable for its low harmonic entropy, and is often reported to sound more consonant than the half-octave tritone; indeed it appears in the 4:5:6:7 tetrad that forms the basis of consonance in 7-limit JI. Its inversion is 10/7, which measures about 617.5¢, and these two septimal tritones differ by the superparticular interval 50/49, about 35.0¢. Systems which temper out 50/49 will equate 7/5 and 10/7, usually to the 600¢ half-octave.

Another just tritone is the 3-limit 729/512, 611.7¢, and this is literally a tri-tone, since it is (9/8)3, or three "whole tones". Yet another is 45/32, about 590.2¢, which appears in the 5-limit (inversion is 64/45). See also 13/9, 18/13, 17/12, 24/17, 25/18 and 36/25.

See also Gallery of Just Intervals