16/15: Difference between revisions
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Cmloegcmluin (talk | contribs) →See also: link to other diatonic semitone |
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* [[15/8]] – its [[octave complement]] | * [[15/8]] – its [[octave complement]] | ||
* [[45/32]] – its [[fifth complement]] | * [[45/32]] – its [[fifth complement]] | ||
* [[256/243]] - the Pythagorean (3-limit) diatonic semitone | |||
* [[Gallery of just intervals]] | * [[Gallery of just intervals]] | ||
Revision as of 21:33, 17 June 2021
Interval information |
classic minor second
reduced,
reduced subharmonic
[sound info]
The 5-limit just diatonic semitone is the superparticular interval 16/15 – the difference between the major third 5/4 and the fourth 4/3, and between 3/2 and 8/5.
When this ratio is taken as a comma to be tempered, it produces father temperament, where 4/3 and 5/4 are equated. In this temperament, major thirds and fifths become octave-inverses of each other.
See also
- 15/8 – its octave complement
- 45/32 – its fifth complement
- 256/243 - the Pythagorean (3-limit) diatonic semitone
- Gallery of just intervals