15/14: Difference between revisions

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Add temperaments (generated by this interval) section, mention marvel in terminology section (not obvious to people not quite familiar with septimal meantone, so it clarifies the context)
Temperaments: Add tertiosec
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* [[Septidiasemi]]
* [[Septidiasemi]]
* [[Subsedia]]
* [[Subsedia]]
In addition, this [[fractional-octave temperament]] is generated by a ~15/14:
* [[Tertiosec]]
[[10th-octave temperaments]] treat ~15/14 as the period, including [[decoid]] and [[linus]].
{{todo|complete list}}
{{todo|complete list}}
In addition, several [[10th-octave temperaments]] treat ~15/14 as the period, including [[decoid]] and [[linus]].


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 17:53, 5 August 2025

Interval information
Ratio 15/14
Factorization 2-1 × 3 × 5 × 7-1
Monzo [-1 1 1 -1
Size in cents 119.4428¢
Names septimal diatonic semitone,
septimal major semitone
Color name ry1, ruyo unison
FJS name [math]\displaystyle{ \text{A1}^{5}_{7} }[/math]
Special properties superparticular,
reduced
Tenney norm (log2 nd) 7.71425
Weil norm (log2 max(n, d)) 7.81378
Wilson norm (sopfr(nd)) 17

[sound info]
Open this interval in xen-calc
English Wikipedia has an article on:

15/14 is a superparticular ratio with a numerator which is the fifth triangular number. It may be found as the interval between many 7-limit ratios, including:

It also arises in higher limits as:

Terminology

15/14 is traditionally called a diatonic semitone, perhaps for its proximity (and conflation in systems such as septimal meantone and marvel) with the classic diatonic semitone 16/15. However, 15/14 is a chromatic semitone in both Helmholtz–Ellis notation and the Functional Just System, viewed as the apotome 2187/2048 altered by 5120/5103. Marc Sabat has taken to call it the major chromatic semitone in the same material where 21/20 is also named as the minor diatonic semitone[1].

Approximation

15/14 is very accurately approximated by 10edo (1\10) and all linus temperaments. The linus comma, 5.6¢, is the amount by which a stack of ten 15/14's falls short of the octave.

In combination with 19/17 it forms a good approximation of golden meantone. The untempered combination of five 19/17's and two 15/14's leads to an interval that is sharp to an octave by the mercurial comma: (19/17)5 × (15/14)2 = 2 / (mercurial comma).

Temperaments

The following linear temperaments are generated by a ~15/14:

In addition, this fractional-octave temperament is generated by a ~15/14:

10th-octave temperaments treat ~15/14 as the period, including decoid and linus.

See also

References