289/288

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Interval information
Ratio 289/288
Subgroup monzo 2.3.17 [-5 -2 2
Size in cents 6.0008173¢
Names semitonisma,
septendecimal semitones comma,
septendecimal 6-cent comma
Color name 17oo2, soso 2nd,
Soso comma
FJS name [math]\text{d2}^{17,17}[/math]
Special properties square superparticular,
reduced
Tenney height (log2 nd) 16.3449
Weil height (log2 max(n, d)) 16.3499
Wilson height (sopfr(nd)) 50
Harmonic entropy
(Shannon, [math]\sqrt{nd}[/math])
~1.52958 bits
Comma size small
S-expression S17
open this interval in xen-calc

289/288, the semitonisma, also described as the septendecimal semitones comma and septendecimal 6-cent comma, is a 17-limit (also 2.3.17 subgroup) superparticular comma of about 6 cents. It is the difference between 17/16 and 18/17, the two septendecimal semitones, as well as between 17/12 and 24/17, the two septendecimal tritones. It is also the difference between two stacked 17/16 and 9/8.

Commatic relations

This comma identifies itself as the difference between the following superparticular pairs:

It factors into the following superparticular pairs:

Temperaments

Tempering out this comma in the full 17-limit results in the rank-6 semitonismic temperament, or in the 2.3.17 subgroup, the rank-2 semitonic temperament. In either case the octave is split into two equal parts, each representing 17/12~24/17, and thus so is the whole tone, each representing 17/16~18/17. Odd edos cannot temper it out.

Semitonic

See No-fives subgroup temperaments #Semitonic.

Semitonismic

Subgroup: 2.3.5.7.11.13.17

Mapping:

[⟨ 2 0 0 0 0 0 5 ],
0 1 0 0 0 0 1 ],
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 ],
0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ],
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 ],
0 0 0 0 0 1 0 ]]
mapping generators: ~17/12, ~3, ~5, ~7, ~11, ~13

Optimal tuning (CTE): ~17/12 = 1\2, ~3/2 = 702.3472, 5/4, 7/4, 11/8, 13/8

Optimal ET sequence34d, 38df, 46, 58, 72, 130, 140, 190g, 212g, 270g, 342fg, 402defgg, 460gg, 532dfggg, 672defggg*

* optimal patent val: 280

Etymology

The semitonisma was named by Flora Canou in 2023. It is a contraction of septendecimal semitones comma into a single word consisting of Latin semi ("half") and tonus ("tone"). However, septendecimal semitones comma and septendecimal 6-cent comma were attested much earlier.

See also