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Waves and guitar frets

Physics Asked by christinaa on December 9, 2020

I have a problem to solve for Physics III at university and I can’t seem to understand how to solve this question.

I have the fundamental frequency at $440$ Hz, $L=1$ m, and $ρ=0.002$ kg/m.

After having proven that $f[n+1]/f[n]=f[n]/f[n-1]=a^{1/12}$ we are asked to find the positions $x(i)$ for $i=1,2,…,12$ in order to still the string (frets) so that the string’s oscillation can happen with the aforementioned frequencies. I don’t know how to solve this, where do I start?

2 Answers

The frequency spectrum is given by:

$$f_n=frac{n}{2L}sqrt{frac{T}{rho}}$$

and:

$$f_1=frac{1}{2L}sqrt{frac{T}{rho}}$$

where $T$ is the string tension.

Alternatively, write:

$$f_n=frac{1}{2x(n)}sqrt{frac{T}{rho}}$$ So that:

$$boxed{frac{f_n}{f_1}=frac{x(n)}{L}}$$

Where $x(1)=L$.

Calculate the $x(n)$ from there.

Answered by Gert on December 9, 2020

Take a look at the picture bellow (adapted from here https://guitar-auctions.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/lot0126.jpg) where I give you the recursive idea to calculate the length $x_{n+1}$ from $x_n$ for the frets on a guitar. $x_0$ is simply the length of your string (in your case $x_0 = L = 1 $ m). The density of the string does not matter. Why? As you can see, the guitar has six strings. All string have different densities, but the fret distance progression is the same for all strings.

enter image description here

The density, together with the length $L$, has a role in the fundamental frequency of the string which is given by

$$f_1 = frac{1}{2L} sqrt{frac{T}{mu}}$$

As can be seen, the product of the fundamental frequency by the length is a constant, because $T$ (string tension) and $mu$ (string density) are constants. So by changing the length $x_0 = L$ of the string to $x_1$ will change the frequency. That is

$$ f_1 L = f_2 x_1 $$

But the frequency $f_2$ should be $f_2 = f_1 2^{1/12}$ according to the exercise you solved. So substituting in the above equation and eliminating $f1$ we find

$$ L = 2^{1/12} x_1$$

having into account that we defined $ L = x_0$ we find

$x_1 = frac {x_0}{2^{1/12}}$

You can proceed the same way to calculate $x_{n+1}$ from $x_n$.

Answered by Blue on December 9, 2020

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