- Tuning fork
A tuning fork is an acoustic
resonator in the form of a two-prongedfork with the tines formed from a U-shaped bar of elastic metal (usuallysteel ). It resonates at a specific constant pitch when set vibrating by striking it against a surface or with an object, and emits a pure musical tone after waiting a moment to allow some highovertones to die out. The pitch that a particular tuning fork generates depends on the length of the two prongs.Explanation
Currently, the most common tuning fork used by musicians sounds the note of A (440 Hz, international "concert pitch"), which has long been used as a standard tuning note by orchestras, it being the pitch of the violin's second string played open, the first string of the viola played open, and an octave above the first string of the cello, again played open. However, they are also commercially made to vibrate at frequencies corresponding to all musical pitches within the central octave of the piano, and other pitches.
The tuning fork was invented in
1711 byJohn Shore , SergeantTrumpet er to the court, who had parts specifically written for him by bothGeorge Frideric Handel andHenry Purcell .The reason for using the fork shape is that, when it vibrates in its principal mode (the mode that produces the desired pitch), the handle vibrates up and down as the prongs move apart and together. This allows the handle to transmit the vibration to a resonator (like the hollow rectangular box often used), which amplifies the sound of the fork. [The Science of Sound, 3rd ed., Rossing, Moore, and Wheeler] Without the resonator (which may be as simple as a table top to which the handle is pressed), the sound is very faint.
Well-known manufacturers of tuning forks include Ragg and John Walker, both of
Sheffield ,England .Calculation of frequency
The frequency of a tuning fork depends on its dimensions and the material from which is made: [ [http://www.tms.org/pubs/journals/jom/0511/burleigh-0511.html Tuning Forks For Vibrant Teaching] ] :, and where the tines are cylindrical, [ [http://www.nanomedicine.com/NMI/10.1.2.2.htm Mechanical Oscillators] ] Where:
* "f" is thefrequency the fork vibrates at
* "A" is the cross-sectionalarea of the tuning fork
* "l" is thelength of the fork's tines
* "E" is theYoung's modulus of the material the fork is made from
* "ρ" is thedensity of the material the fork is made from
* "R" is the radius of the tinesUses
They are commonly used to tune
musical instrument s, althoughelectronic tuner s also exist, and some musicians have perfect pitch. Tuning forks can be tuned by removing material off the tines (filing the ends of the tines to raise it or filing inside the base of the tines to lower it) or by sliding weights attached to the prongs. Once tuned, a tuning fork's frequency varies only with changes in theelastic modulus of the material; for precise work, a tuning fork should be kept in a thermostatically controlled enclosure. Large forks are often made to be driven electrically, like an electric bell or buzzer, and can vibrate for an indefinite time.In musical instruments
A number of keyboard musical instruments using constructions similar to tuning forks have been made, the most popular of them being the
Rhodes piano , which has hammers hitting constructions working on the same principle as tuning forks.In electromechanical watches
Electromechanical watches developed by Max Hetzel forBulova used a 360Hertz tuning fork with a battery to make a mechanical watch keep time with great accuracy. The production of the Bulova Accutron, as it was called, ceased in 1977.A tiny
quartz tuning fork is used incrystal oscillator s, the most notable use of which are quartzdigital watch es. The piezoelectric properties of quartzcrystal s cause a quartz tuning fork to generate a pulsed electrical current as it resonates, which is used by thecomputer chip in the watch to keep track of the passage oftime . In today's watches, they generally resonate at Hz. (Seequartz clock .)Medical uses
Tuning forks, usually C-512, are used by medical practitioners to assess a patient's hearing. Lower-pitched ones (usually C-128) are also used to check vibration sense as part of the examination of the peripheral nervous system.
Tuning forks also play a role in several
alternative medicine modalities, such assonopuncture andpolarity therapy .Radar gun calibration
A
radar gun , typically used for measuring the speed of cars or balls in sports, is usually calibrated with tuning forks. Instead of the frequency, these forks have the calibration speed and radar band (e.g. X-Band or K-Band) for which they are calibrated.See also
*
Pitch pipe
*Electronic tuner References
External links
* [http://www.onlinetuningfork.com/ http://www.onlinetuningfork.com] , an online tuning fork using
Macromedia Flash Player .
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