9/8: Difference between revisions

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== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Gallery of Just Intervals]]
 
* [[16/9]] – its [[octave complement]]
* [[16/9]] – its [[octave complement]]
* [[4/3]] – its [[fifth complement]]
* [[4/3]] – its [[fifth complement]]
* [[Gallery of Just Intervals]]
* [[Wikipedia:Major_second|Major second - Wikipedia]]
* [[Wikipedia:Major_second|Major second - Wikipedia]]



Revision as of 15:22, 27 September 2020

Interval information
Ratio 9/8
Factorization 2-3 × 32
Monzo [-3 2
Size in cents 203.91¢
Name whole tone
Color name w2, wa 2nd
FJS name [math]\displaystyle{ \text{M2} }[/math]
Special properties square superparticular,
reduced,
reduced harmonic
Tenney height (log2 nd) 6.16993
Weil height (log2 max(n, d)) 6.33985
Wilson height (sopfr(nd)) 12

[sound info]
Open this interval in xen-calc

9/8 is the Pythagorean whole tone or major second, measuring approximately 203.9¢. It can be arrived at by stacking two just perfect fifths (3/2) and reducing the result by one octave. However, it is also a relatively low overtone in its own right, octave-reduced. It can be treated as a dissonance or a consonance, depending on compositional context.

Two 9/8's stacked produce 81/64, the Pythagorean major third, a rather bright major third of approximately 407.8¢. However, a 9/8 plus the minor whole tone 10/9 yields 5/4. This distinction, between a major whole tone and minor whole tone, has been completely obliterated in 12edo, and so we are unaccustomed to thinking of more than one size of whole tone comprising a major third. Other systems which temper out this difference (which is 81/80, the syntonic comma of about 21.5¢) include 19edo, 26edo, 31edo, and all meantone temperaments.

9/8 is well-represented in 6edo and its multiples. Edos which tune 3/2 close to just (29edo, 41edo, 53edo, to name three) will tune 9/8 close as well.

See also