Temperament addition: Difference between revisions
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Take the case of meantone + porcupine = tetracot from the previous section. What this relationship means is that tetracot is the temperament which doesn't temper out the meantone comma itself, nor the porcupine comma itself, but instead tempers out whatever comma relates pitches that are exactly one meantone comma plus one porcupine comma apart. And that's the tetracot comma! And on the other hand, for the temperament difference, dicot, this is the temperament that tempers out neither meantone nor porcupine, but instead the comma that's the size of the difference between them. And that's the dicot comma. So tetracot tempers out 80/81 × 250/243, and dicot tempers out 80/81 × 243/250. | Take the case of meantone + porcupine = tetracot from the previous section. What this relationship means is that tetracot is the temperament which doesn't temper out the meantone comma itself, nor the porcupine comma itself, but instead tempers out whatever comma relates pitches that are exactly one meantone comma plus one porcupine comma apart. And that's the tetracot comma! And on the other hand, for the temperament difference, dicot, this is the temperament that tempers out neither meantone nor porcupine, but instead the comma that's the size of the difference between them. And that's the dicot comma. So tetracot tempers out 80/81 × 250/243, and dicot tempers out 80/81 × 243/250. | ||
Similar reasoning is possible for the mapping-rows of mappings — the analogs of the commas of comma bases — but are less intuitive to describe. What's reasonably easy to understand, though, is how temperament addition on maps is essentially navigation of the scale tree for the rank-2 temperament they share; for more information on this, see [[Douglas Blumeyer's RTT | Similar reasoning is possible for the mapping-rows of mappings — the analogs of the commas of comma bases — but are less intuitive to describe. What's reasonably easy to understand, though, is how temperament addition on maps is essentially navigation of the scale tree for the rank-2 temperament they share; for more information on this, see [[Dave Keenan & Douglas Blumeyer's guide to RTT: exploring temperaments#Scale trees]]. So if you understand the effects on individual maps, then you can apply those to changes of maps within a more complex temperament. | ||
Ultimately, these two effects are the primary applications of temperament addition.<ref>It has also been asserted that there exists a connection between temperament addition and "Fokker groups" as discussed on this page: [[Fokker block]], but the connection remains unclear to this author.</ref> | Ultimately, these two effects are the primary applications of temperament addition.<ref>It has also been asserted that there exists a connection between temperament addition and "Fokker groups" as discussed on this page: [[Fokker block]], but the connection remains unclear to this author.</ref> |