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![]() "Hein ten Horn" wrote in message ... Ron Baker, Pluralitas! wrote: Hein ten Horn wrote: A vibrating element here (such as a cubic micrometre of matter) experiences different changing forces. Yet the element cannot follow all of them at the same time. It does. Not identically but it does follow all of them. Impossible. Remember, we're talking about sound. Mechanical forces only. Suppose you're driving, just going round the corner. From the outside a fistful of forces is working on your body, downwards, upwards, sidewards. It is absolutely impossible that your body's centre of gravity is following different forces in different directions at the same time. Only the resulting force is changing your movement (according to Newton's second law). As a matter of fact the resulting force (the resultant) is fully determining the change of the velocity (vector) of the element. The resulting force on our element is changing at the frequency of 222 Hz, so the matter is vibrating at the one and only 222 Hz. Your idea of frequency is informal and leaves out essential aspects of how physical systems work. Nonsense. Mechanical oscillations are fully determined by forces acting on the vibrating mass. Both mass and resulting force determine the frequency. It's just a matter of applying the laws of physics. Let me call you an idiot now and get that out of the way. You're an idiot. You don't know the laws of physics or how to apply them. How do you determine "the frequency"? Show me the math. What is "the frequency" of cos(2pi 200 t) + cos(2pi 210 t) + cos(2pi 1200 t) + cos(2pi 1207 t) Question Is our auditory system in some way acting like a spectrum analyser? (Is it able to distinguish the composing frequencies from a vibration?) Ron? Somebody else? Thanks gr, Hein |
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