4096/3993: Difference between revisions
Changed "inframinor" back to "subminor" due to the realization that the Alpharabian inframinor second is actually 8192/8019 based on Alpharabian tuning's actual interval arithmetic. |
m Misc. edits, categories |
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{{Infobox Interval | {{Infobox Interval | ||
| Ratio = 4096/3993 | | Ratio = 4096/3993 | ||
| Monzo = 12 -1 0 0 -3 | | Monzo = 12 -1 0 0 -3 | ||
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[[Category:Quartertone]] | [[Category:Quartertone]] | ||
[[Category:Alpharabian]] | [[Category:Alpharabian]] | ||
Revision as of 19:43, 19 December 2021
| Interval information |
Alpharabian subminor second
reduced subharmonic
4096/3993, the Alpharabian paralimma or Alpharabian subminor second, is notable for being one of only two 11-limit quartertone intervals needed in order to add up to a familiar 9/8 whole tone. Specifically, it is the quartertone that forms the difference between the whole tone and a stack of three 33/32 quartertones, and can thus be regarded as a sort of subminor second. Remarkably, it is currently the simplest interval in terms of odd-limit that is known to result from stacking three identical quartertones with rational intervals and subtracting said stack from a 9/8 whole tone. Furthermore, although 38/37, 35/34, 32/31 and 28/27 are all simpler intervals that can be called "quarter tones" and can safely be regarded as some kind of second, subtracting any one of these intervals from 9/8 yields an interval that has a ratio lacking a cubed number in the numerator and or the denominator, and such an interval cannot be split into three equal quartertones with rational intervals.