harmoniye ait

listen to the pronunciation of harmoniye ait
التركية - الإنجليزية
harmonic
Pleasant to hear; harmonious; melodious
{a} musical, accordant
An exact integer multiple of a fundamental frequency or tone
A musical note produced by a number of vibrations which is a multiple of the number producing some other; an overtone
Harmonic means composed, played, or sung using two or more notes which sound right and pleasing together. relating to the way notes are played or sung together to give a pleasing sound
A sinusoidal quantity having a frequency that is an integral multiple (´2, ´3, etc ) of a fundamental (´1) frequency
a tone that is a component of a complex sound relating to vibrations that occur as a result of vibrations in a nearby body; "sympathetic vibration"
A single frequency component of a sound Also called "overtone," or "partial " The timbre, or tone color, of a sound may be characterized by its harmonic content A 100 Hz sound that is high in harmonic content (for example, a sawtooth wave) will have harmonics at 200 Hz, 300 Hz, 400 Hz, etc
of or relating to harmony as distinct from melody and rhythm; "subtleties of harmonic change and tonality"- Ralph Hill of or relating to the branch of acoustics that studies the composition of musical sounds; "the sound of the resonating cavity cannot be the only determinant of the harmonic response
{i} overtone, secondary tone which is higher than the primary or fundamental tone (Music)
involving or characterized by harmony
a sine wave component of a complex sound whose frequency is a whole number multiple of the fundamental frequency
A frequency that is a multiple of the fundamental See also Distortion and Non-Linearity
Having relations or properties bearing some resemblance to those of musical consonances; said of certain numbers, ratios, proportions, points, lines, motions, and the like
A sinusoidal component of a periodic wave or quantity having a frequency that is an integral multiple of the fundamental frequency For example, a component which is twice the fundamental frequency is called the second harmonic (the fundamental is the first harmonic, which is frequently misunderstood)
a tone that is a component of a complex sound
an electrical frequency that is an integer multiple of the fundamental frequency; for example, if 60 Hz is the fundamental freqency, then 120 Hz is the second harmonic and 180 Hz is the third harmonic; some electronic devices, such as ballasts or power supplies, can cause harmonic distortion, directly affecting power quality
relating to vibrations that occur as a result of vibrations in a nearby body; "sympathetic vibration"
Harmonic is the full multiple of a base frequency
After the fundamental, which is the lowest frequency and the one that determines the pitch, the first harmonic is the octave with a ratio of 2: 1 Next is the fifth, with a ratio of 3: 2 The harmonics eventually produce all the notes of the natural scale In music, the first harmonic is the octave In physics, the first harmonic is the fundamental
harmoniye ait
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