Edge Tone
The pressure created by this interaction with the edge feeds back to the area of the slit, tending to push the stream upward. The reverse happens when the stream moves to the top side of the edge and then the process repeats itself. As a result, a periodic flipping of the airstream from side to side can produce a sound called an edge tone. More efficient edge tone instruments can be created by coupling a slit, an edge, and an air column. When such an instrument has been produced, the frequency is determined primarily by the air column resonant frequencies which will control the rate of oscillation of the air across the edge. The edgetone effect in such an instrument serves to help initiate and sustain the tone, and can help make the transition to a higher harmonic of the air column. The difference between the "edgetone" as envisioned in the sounding of a flute, recorder, organ pipe, etc. and the tones produced by directing air over an edge which is not coupled to an air column has been a subject of considerable discussion and investigation. Benade comments "Until recently there has been a tendency ... to confuse the sounds produced by blowing a narrow air jet against a sharp edge when the edge forms part of a flute or an organ pipe (air reed behavior) with those produced when the system is run in isolation (edge-tone behavior). In the latter case a type of repetitive eddying called vortex shedding takes place on alternate sides of the air jet, and a sound is produced if a sharp edge is used to separate the two sets of vortices. Vortex phenomena have only a secondary influence on flute-type sound production; moreover, at ordinary musical blowing pressures the edge-tone frequencies are so high as to be nearly inaudible. Some of the literature which addresses the differences between the free edgetones and the behavior of the edges in flutes and organ pipes:
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Index Woodwind instruments Musical instruments References Benade Sec 22.6, p492 | ||||||
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Slit, Edge and Air Column
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Index Woodwind instruments Musical instruments | ||||
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Air Oscillations from Slits
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Index Woodwind instruments Musical instruments Reference Hall p. 235 | |||
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Slit and Edge
This regime, referred to as Region I of the edgetone behavior, is the main operating mode for organ pipes and presumably also for the flute. Note that the pitch can be made to go up by either increasing the airstream velocity, or by decreasing the distance from the slit to the edge (both applicable to playing the flute). Because of the feedback mechanism to the slit, the effective diameter of the edge does not figure directly in this pitch relationship as it does in the case of aeolian tones.
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Index Woodwind instruments Musical instruments Reference Hall p. 235 | |||
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