Permutation product set: Difference between revisions

From Xenharmonic Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Fredg999 category edits (talk | contribs)
Fredg999 category edits (talk | contribs)
m Removing from Category:Theory using Cat-a-lot
Line 22: Line 22:
[[Category:math]]
[[Category:math]]
[[Category:Scale]]
[[Category:Scale]]
[[Category:theory]]

Revision as of 05:32, 5 March 2023

A permutation product set (PPS) is obtained from a chord C = {1,a_1,a_2,...,a_n} as follows:

Let b_1,...,b_'n be the intervals between successive notes of the chord: b_i = a_i'/a_(i-1). These n intervals can be permuted in n! ways, yielding n! different chords:

{1,b_s(1),b_s(1)*b_s(2),...} where s is a permutation of {1,2,...,n}

The union of these n chords is the PPS of C. PPSes may or may not be octave equivalent.

Permutation product sets were introduced by Marcel De Velde in 2009 to explain the diatonic scale.

Special cases

If C is a harmonic series, {1/1,2/1,...,n/1}, then the PPS of C is called the n-limit harmonic permutation product set (HPPS). n can be even.

The octave equivalent 6-limit HPPS is the union of the major and minor diatonic scales:

1/1 9/8 6/5 5/4 4/3 3/2 8/5 5/3 9/5 15/8 2/1

The octave equivalent 8-limit HPPS has 33 notes.

The octave equivalent 16-limit HPPS has 1775 notes.