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String vibration: Revision history


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  • curprev 18:0118:01, 18 November 2020 73.70.240.67 talk 12,755 bytes +63 Frequency of the wave: I searched for days on the internet trying to justify this equation without luck. Everyone assumes this is true, so cannot find any support for this assumption. If there are standing waves, then there is no velocity of propagation (which is only true for transient events like picking a string). So a different formula must be used to justify this. This equation seems only justified for transient vibrations, vibrating the 'fixed' endpoints (e.g. a guitar body). undo Tags: Reverted Visual edit

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  • curprev 11:1711:17, 6 June 2020 PowerPCG5 talk contribs 12,753 bytes +4,254 Added example using my actual guitar and strings for illustration; also, since the time the {{Refimprove}} tag was attached to the article a decade ago, it seems IMHO that editors have done a pretty good job providing additional source citations and references; proposing to pull back the tag tentatively as a result undo

5 June 2020

  • curprev 05:5905:59, 5 June 2020 PowerPCG5 talk contribs 8,499 bytes −7 To reduce confusion, use μ consistently throughout article to denote linear density (especially since ρ is most commonly used in physics to represent density as mass/volume, rather than linear density) undo

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