Talk:Twelfth root of two

Latest comment: 9 months ago by Tamfang in topic Choice of rationalizations

Good edit! edit

Good edit by Scythe33 as that it makes the article easier to read. hydnjo talk 01:17, 8 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

Changes 03/31/2006 edit

I made a few changes to the page. I found a lot of the information to be inaccurate or untrue, so a good deal of it was removed. I did try to add an explanation for the use of this particular number. If someone else can think of a more concise way of explaining it, please edit it. Here's a list of the other things I removed or changed:

  • "Growling" should have been "howling". Growling was not the word used, historically, and it doesn't describe anything close to the sound of a wolf fifth.
  • Harmonic tuning does not cause "errors" in temperament. The use of the word temperament refers to a tempering (modification) of harmonic tunings. In other words, tempering is the error, albeit an intentional and purposeful one. Furthermore harmonic tuning doesn't cause dissonance especially not in the harmonic content of strings. (I'm not sure what harmonic content meant, but inharmonicity in strings is caused by tension and thickness, and doesn't have much to do with tuning, except the fact that temperaments are by nature out of tune with the harmonics of the string.)
  • Meantone tuning was favoured in the Renaissance, which was very much not an equal temperament. In fact, other solutions to the modulation problem were preferred, ie. Nicola Vicentino's Archicembalo with an extra manual and divided keys to provide just intonation in many more keys, or even in the Baroque, it was not uncommon for the black keys of an organ to be divded in two so that sharp and flat keys could be tuned differently.
  • While the black keys and white keys on a piano to correspond to pentatonic and diatonic scales, these two things have nothing to do with equal temperament, and equal temperament was certainly not any kind of attempt to combine the two. It's an interesting observation, but really not relevant to the subject of this page.

Rainwarrior 22:51, 31 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Vicentino's Archicembalo (article needs expanding BTW) was not designed for just intonation, but extended meantone temperament, or the very similar 31 equal temperament. Other than that, good comments. —Keenan Pepper 23:24, 31 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
I thought I might mention that you should be careful about quoting Partch on historical matters. His account in Genesis isn't entirely accurate (you might already be aware of this). This particular factoid I think is correct, but personally I haven't checked up on it. I did change "string lengths" to "pipes" for you, not only because I'm sure it was pipes in the example, but because strings also depend on tension for their pitch. Pipe pitch doesn't entirely depend on length either, but at least it's a slightly better model instrument for the experiment. (As for Vicentino, I tend to refer to meantone as a form of just intonation, which is a pretty broad term for me. Pay no mind...) Rainwarrior 00:15, 1 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
Yeah, Partch is great, but he's not always the most reliable source. I'll try to find a different one. —Keenan Pepper 00:32, 1 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

History edit

Computing the twelfth root of 2 to nine decimal places by no means requires starting with   (with 108 zeros), and then extracting successive square roots followed by a cube root. Although it is possible to do it that way, it is easier (not to mention less fraught with arithmetical peril) to use trial and error. When one extracts square roots and especially cube roots directly, one misstep invalidates all future values. Trial and error reduces this risk considerably.

Thus, one may begin with a guess of, say,  . We raise this to the twelfth power by computing  , then  , and lastly  . We multiply the last two to obtain   This extra residue of   may be accounted for by dividing it by 24 (the power, 12, times the approximate result, 2) and in this case subtracting it from our guess. Our next guess is then  , and we repeat the process. Each time we raise a guess to the twelfth power is independent of all other times, so that errors do not cascade through the process.

This method is reasonably efficient; even proceeding strictly by hand calculations, one might be able to perform the necessary calculations within a day or so; with fractions instead of decimals, perhaps a week or two. By comparison, direct extraction of the twelfth root would take months, if not years. I recommend that the relevant text be removed or revised. BrianTung 21:34, 8 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

The passage about Prince Chu Tsai-Yu is a quote from Harry Partch's Genesis of a Music (Pg. 381, Da Capo Press, 1974), which in turn appears to be a quote from Barbour's Equal Temperament (Pg 106-108), which I have not read. Whether or not this is accurate, I haven't verified myself (I asked about it earlier though.) The passage in Partch says: Of the prince's accomplishment a contemporary modern theorist reminds us that "the computation would have to begin, for certain tones, with numbers containing 108 zeros, of which the 12th root would have to be extracted, as Mersenne did, by taking the square root twice and then the cube root. This lengthy and laborious procedure was followed without error." followed by a footnote to the Barbour source. For me, this wording is suspect, as he writes "would have to" and not "did". I'll see if I can find a source with direct commentary on Chu Tsai-Yu's actual published tables and calculation. (In a similar debate about Ching Fang, I managed to locate an article explaining in detail his calculations. I haven't yet found such a thing for Chu Tsai-Yu.) - Rainwarrior 22:08, 8 June 2006 (UTC)Reply
Follow up: I found an article by Barbour about this matter, which reads:
The date (1593) of Ch'eng's work is of interest in connection with the present study, as it is almost exactly contemporary with Prince Chu Tsai-yu's treatise on music, "Lu lu ching i," 1595 or 1596. Tsai-yu is honored by musicians for having been one of the first persons--if not the first--to give the "exact lengths and bores of 12 pipes in correctly equal temperament." The problem of finding these lengths involves the extraction of the 12th root of 1/2, for the ratio for each semitone is 1/2^(1/12). Tsai-yu gives the approximate lengths to nine places, as 10.00000000, 9.43874312, 8.90898718, etc.
Unfortunately Tsai-yu does not explain how his no doubt very laborious calculations were made. Mersenne, in solving the same problem to six places only, actually writes 2048 followed by 60 zeros as the number of which the 12th root is to be taken, to give the first fret of the viol; i.e., a number that is twice the second one of Tsai-yu's lengths, if we ignore the location of the decimal point. So we can picture Tsai-yu beginning with 108 zeros.
A SIXTEENTH CENTURY APPROXIMATION FOR PI, J.M. Barbour, The American Mathematical Monthly, 1933 (Pp. 69-73).
This clearly shows that Chu Tsai-yu's method was not known to the author, and he made the assumption based on calculations made by the European Mersenne. I would agree with removing this bit of trivia about the calculation from the article, for the reason that is only speculation and not noteworthy. - Rainwarrior 22:25, 8 June 2006 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for researching that, Rainwarrior. You might want to work some of this information into the article (I mean let's face it, what else could we possibly put in it?), but you're right, we definitely shouldn't repeat the error and say that's what he "must have" done. —Keenan Pepper 23:30, 8 June 2006 (UTC)Reply
I put a little thing in about Mersenne. - Rainwarrior 00:40, 9 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

I find this sentence impossible to read. I think the grammar's wrong; and I don't get the second half of the sentence. — Preceding unsigned comment added by MarcusMueller (talkcontribs) 15:26, 25 May 2014 (UTC)Reply

The sentence was: "This would be calculated again later in 1636 by the French mathematician Marin Mersenne, and as the techniques for calculating logarithms became widely known, this calculation would eventually become trivial." Hyacinth (talk) 16:00, 24 December 2018 (UTC)Reply

Choice of rationalizations edit

Its value is 1.05946309435929..., which is slightly more than 1817 ≈ 1.05882. Better approximations are 107101 ≈ 1.059406 or 1101110393 ≈ 1.0594631.

How were these ratios chosen? I whipped up a little program to find the "best" rational approximations using the method of continued fractions, and got: 1/1, 17/16, 18/17, 89/84, 196/185, 1461/1379, 1657/1564, 3118/2943, 7893/7450, 18904/17843, 140221/132351, 579788/547247, 720009/679598, 2019806/1906443, 2739815/2586041. (The sequence of partial quotients is 1, 16, 1, 4, 2, 7, 1, 1, 2, 2, 7, 4, 1, 2, 1.) —Tamfang (talk) 07:35, 13 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

You're quite correct! I have updated the list using the fractions I boldfaced in your remark. You picked a great place to stop, the next partial quotient is 60. — Glenn L (talk) 09:23, 13 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

I'd strongly suggest just deleting all approximations but 1817. An approximation by a ratio of two five-digit numbers makes no sense at all; you could have just given ten significant digits and would have been closer to the actual number. Who invents the need for approximations like that? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 95.114.24.50 (talk) 09:05, May 25, 2014 (UTC)

I have to agree. —Tamfang (talk) 22:41, 14 July 2023 (UTC)Reply