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This book explores the fascinating and intimate relationship
between music and physics. Over millennia, the playing of, and
listening to music have stimulated creativity and curiosity in
people all around the globe. Beginning with the basics, the authors
first address the tonal systems of European-type music, comparing
them with those of other, distant cultures. They analyze the
physical principles of common musical instruments with emphasis on
sound creation and particularly charisma. Modern research on the
psychology of musical perception - the field known as
psychoacoustics - is also described. The sound of orchestras in
concert halls is discussed, and its psychoacoustic effects are
explained. Finally, the authors touch upon the role of music for
our mind and society. Throughout the book, interesting stories and
anecdotes give insights into the musical activities of physicists
and their interaction with composers and musicians.
This volume is about ultra high-speed cameras, which enable us to
see what we normally do not see. These are objects that are moving
very fast, or that we just ignore. Ultra high-speed cameras invite
us to a wonderland of microseconds. There Alice (the reader) meets
a ultra high-speed rabbit (this volume) and travels together
through this wonderland from the year 1887 to 2017. They go to the
horse riding ground and see how a horse gallops. The rabbit takes
her to a showroom where various cameras and illumination devices
are presented. Then, he sends Alice into semiconductor labyrinths,
wind tunnels, mechanical processing factories, and dangerous
explosive fields. Sometimes Alice is large, and at other times she
is very small. She sits even inside a car engine. She falls down
together with a droplet. She enters a microbubble, is thrown out
with a jet stream, and finds herself in a human body. Waking up
from her dream, she sees children playing a game: "I see what you
do not see, and this is....". Alice thinks: "The ultra high-speed
rabbit showed me many things which I had never seen. Now I will go
again to this wonderland, and try to find something new.
This volume is about ultra high-speed cameras, which enable us to
see what we normally do not see. These are objects that are moving
very fast, or that we just ignore. Ultra high-speed cameras invite
us to a wonderland of microseconds. There Alice (the reader) meets
a ultra high-speed rabbit (this volume) and travels together
through this wonderland from the year 1887 to 2017. They go to the
horse riding ground and see how a horse gallops. The rabbit takes
her to a showroom where various cameras and illumination devices
are presented. Then, he sends Alice into semiconductor labyrinths,
wind tunnels, mechanical processing factories, and dangerous
explosive fields. Sometimes Alice is large, and at other times she
is very small. She sits even inside a car engine. She falls down
together with a droplet. She enters a microbubble, is thrown out
with a jet stream, and finds herself in a human body. Waking up
from her dream, she sees children playing a game: "I see what you
do not see, and this is....". Alice thinks: "The ultra high-speed
rabbit showed me many things which I had never seen. Now I will go
again to this wonderland, and try to find something new.
This book explores the fascinating and intimate relationship
between music and physics. Over millennia, the playing of, and
listening to music have stimulated creativity and curiosity in
people all around the globe. Beginning with the basics, the authors
first address the tonal systems of European-type music, comparing
them with those of other, distant cultures. They analyze the
physical principles of common musical instruments with emphasis on
sound creation and particularly charisma. Modern research on the
psychology of musical perception - the field known as
psychoacoustics - is also described. The sound of orchestras in
concert halls is discussed, and its psychoacoustic effects are
explained. Finally, the authors touch upon the role of music for
our mind and society. Throughout the book, interesting stories and
anecdotes give insights into the musical activities of physicists
and their interaction with composers and musicians.
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