Diminished second
Inverse | augmented seventh |
---|---|
Name | |
Other names | - |
Abbreviation | dim.2 |
Size | |
Semitones | 0 |
Interval class | 0 |
Just interval | 128:125 |
Cents | |
12-Tone equal temperament | 0 |
24-Tone equal temperament | 50 |
Just intonation | 41.1 |
In classical music from Western culture, a diminished second is the minute (smaller than a semitone) musical interval produced by diminishing a minor second, or diatonic semitone, by a chromatic semitone. It is therefore the difference between the diatonic and chromatic semitones. For instance, the interval from B to C is a diatonic semitone, the interval from B to B♯ is a chromatic semitone, and their difference, the interval from B♯ to C is a diminished second.
The diminished second can be also viewed as a comma, the minute interval between two enharmonically equivalent notes tuned in a slightly different way. This makes it a highly variable quantity between tuning systems. Hence for example C♯ is narrower (or sometimes wider) than D♭ by a diminished second interval, however large or small that may happen to be (see image below).

Size in different tuning systems
In 12-tone equal temperament, the diminished second is identical to the unison (ⓘ), because both semitones have the same size. In 19-tone equal temperament, on the other hand, it is identical to the chromatic semitone and is a respectable 63.16 cents wide. It shows a similar size in third-comma meantone, where it coincides with the greater diesis (62.57 cents). The most commonly used meantone temperaments fall between these extremes, giving it an intermediate size.
In Pythagorean tuning, however, the interval actually shows a descending direction, i.e. a ratio below unison, and thus a negative size (−23.46 cents), equal to the opposite of a Pythagorean comma. Such is also the case in twelfth-comma meantone, although that diminished second is only about a twelfth of the Pythagorean one (−1.95 cents, the opposite of a schisma).
The table below summarizes the definitions of the diminished second in the main tuning systems. In the column labeled "Difference between semitones, m2 is the minor second (diatonic semitone), A1 is the augmented unison (chromatic semitone), and S1, S2, S3, S4 are semitones as defined here. Notice that for 5-limit tuning, 1/6-, 1/4-, and 1/3-comma meantone, the diminished second coincides with the corresponding commas.
Tuning system | Definition of diminished second | Size | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Difference between semitones |
Equivalent to | Cents | Ratio | |
Pythagorean tuning | m2 − A1 | Opposite of Pythagorean comma | −23.46 | 524288:531441 |
1/12-comma meantone | m2 − A1 | Opposite of schisma | −1.95 | 32768:32805 |
12-tone equal temperament | m2 − A1 | Unison | 0.00 | 1:1 |
1/6-comma meantone | m2 − A1 | Diaschisma | 19.55 | 2048:2025 |
5-limit tuning | S3 − S2 | |||
1/4-comma meantone | m2 − A1 | (Lesser) diesis | 41.06 | 128:125 |
5-limit tuning | S3 − S1 | |||
1/3-comma meantone | m2 − A1 | Greater diesis | 62.57 | 648:625 |
5-limit tuning | S4 − S1 | |||
19-tone equal temperament | m2 − A1 | Chromatic semitone (A1 = m2 / 2) | 63.16 | 21/19:1 |