Diaschisma

From Xenharmonic Wiki
Revision as of 10:39, 28 March 2021 by Inthar (talk | contribs) (Example)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Interval information
Ratio 2048/2025
Factorization 211 × 3-4 × 5-2
Monzo [11 -4 -2
Size in cents 19.55257¢
Name diaschisma
FJS name [math]\displaystyle{ \text{d2}_{25} }[/math]
Special properties reduced,
reduced subharmonic
Tenney height (log2 nd) 21.9837
Weil height (log2 max(n, d)) 22
Wilson height (sopfr(nd)) 44
Open this interval in xen-calc

2048/2025, the diaschisma, an interval of 19.553 cents, is the difference between four perfect fifths plus two major thirds and three octaves. Tempering it out leads to the diaschismic family of temperaments. It may also be defined as the difference between a Pythagorean minor seventh (16/9) and a just augmented sixth (225/128), as the difference between two classic diatonic semitones (16/15) and the major whole tone (9/8), that is, (9/8)/(16/15)2, or as the difference between the 5-limit tritone 45/32 and its enharmonic equivalent 64/45.

Example

parizek1 A comma pump progression that assumes that the diaschisma is tempered out (i.e. equates two notes that are separated by a diaschisma).

In the progression, the bassline moves as follows: D-(up 5/4)-F#-(down 4/3)-C#-(down 4/3)-G#-(up 5/4)-C-(up 4/3)-G-(up 3/2)-D. If we ignore octaves, the first three steps (D-G#) moves us up by the tritone 45/32, and the last three steps (G#-D) are the same moves as the first three, thus it moves us up by the tritone 45/32 a second time. While in pure JI, 45/32 is flat of 600c, the fact that the D we come back to is exactly the same as the first D, indicates that two 45/32 tritones are equated to the octave 2/1. In temperament contexts, we see this as equivalent to saying that their difference, which is (2/1) / (45/32)^2 = 2048/2025 is tempered out.

See also