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A chord consists of notes that sound good together. The C major chord starting at middle C has the following frequencies: C - 262 Hz E - 330 Hz G - 392 Hz determine the ratio of the frequency of E to C. Express the answer in a simple integer ratio. How many E waves will fit in the length of four C waves. a. 2 b. 3

2 Answers

5 votes

Answer:

The ratio of the frequency of E to C can be found by dividing the frequency of E by the frequency of C:

330 Hz / 262 Hz ≈ 1.26

To express the answer in a simple integer ratio, we can divide both 330 Hz and 262 Hz by their greatest common factor, which is 2:

330 Hz / 2 = 165 Hz

262 Hz / 2 = 131 Hz

So the ratio of the frequency of E to C is:

165 Hz / 131 Hz = 15/12 ≈ 1.25

This ratio is approximately equal to 5/4

Therefore, the answer is (A) 5 to 4

User Jason Morrison
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3 votes

Answer:

The frequency of note E is:

f(E) = 330 Hz

The frequency of note C is:

f(C) = 262 Hz

The ratio of the frequency of note E to the frequency of note C is just the quotient of these two frequencies:

r = f(E)/f(C) = 330Hz/262Hz = 330/262 = 1.26

Now, we want to find how man E waves will fit in the length of four C waves.

Note that here the word "length" is used, so we need to work with the wavelengths, not with the frequencies.

For waves, we have the relationship:

v = f*λ

where:

v = velocity (in this case, velocity of the sound = 343 m/s)

f = frequency

λ = wavelength.

So, the length of a single E wave is:

λ(E) = (343 m/s)/(330 1/s) = 1.04 m

And the length of a single C note is:

λ(C) = (343 m/s)/(262 1/s) = 1.30 m

In four C waves, the length is:

4*λ(C) = 4*1.30m = 5.2m

The number of E waves that fit in the length of four C waves is equal to the quotient between the length of four C waves and one E wave:

N = (4*λ(C))/(λ(E) ) = (5.2 m)/(1.04m) = 5.14

So we can fit 5 E waves into four C waves.

User Peacepassion
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