8/7: Difference between revisions
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* [[7/6]] – its [[fourth complement]] | * [[7/6]] – its [[fourth complement]] | ||
* [[Gallery of just intervals]] | * [[Gallery of just intervals]] | ||
[[Category:Second]] | [[Category:Second]] | ||
[[Category:Supermajor second]] | [[Category:Supermajor second]] | ||
[[Category:Over-7 intervals]] | [[Category:Over-7 intervals]] |
Latest revision as of 03:49, 15 August 2025
Interval information |
supermajor second,
septimal major second,
septimal supermajor second
reduced,
reduced subharmonic
[sound info]
In just intonation, 8/7 is the septimal major second, or septimal supermajor second, of approximately 231.2 ¢. Although it falls between the familiar major second and minor third of 12edo, it generally sounds more like a wide second than a narrow third. It can be found between the 7th and 8th harmonics and is thus a superparticular ratio. In 7-limit JI and higher, it is treated as a consonance, particularly in the context of a chord such as 4:5:6:7:8, where it appears between the harmonic seventh (7/4) and octave. It differs from the Pythagorean major second of 9/8 by 64/63, a microtone of about 27.3 ¢. It is close in size to 5edo's 240 ¢ step.
A stack of three supermajor seconds is close to a perfect fifth (3/2). The difference is 1029/1024 (about 8.4 ¢), which is tempered out in slendric systems like 31edo.
See also
- 7/4 – its octave complement
- 21/16 – its fifth complement
- 7/6 – its fourth complement
- Gallery of just intervals