What Makes the Standing Waves in a Tube
As discussed in
Standing Waves and Musical Instruments, instruments produce musical tones by trapping waves of specific lengths in the instrument. It's pretty easy to see why the
standing waves on a string can only have certain lengths; since the ends of the strings are held in place, there has to be a
node in the wave at each end. But what is it that makes only certain standing waves possible in a tube of air?
To understand that, you'll have to understand a little bit about what makes waves in a tube different from waves on a string. Waves on a string are
transverse waves. The string is stretched out in one direction (call it "up and down"), but when it's vibrating, the motion of the string is in a different direction (call it "back and forth"). Take a look at this
animation. At the nodes (each end, for example), there is no back and forth motion, but in between the nodes, the string is moving back and forth very rapidly. The term for this back-and-forth motion is
displacement. There is no displacement at a node; the most displacement happens at an
antinode.
The standing waves of air in a tube are not transverse waves. Like all sound waves, they are
longitudinal. So if the air in the tube is moving in a certain direction (call it "left and right"), the vibrations in the air are going in that same direction (in this case, they are rushing "left and right").
But they are like the waves on a string in some important ways. Since they are standing waves, there are still nodes - in this case, places where the air is not rushing back and forth. And, just as on the string, in between the nodes there are antinodes, where the displacement is largest (the air is moving back and forth the most). And when one antinode is going in one direction (left), the antinodes nearest it will be going in the other direction (right). So, even though what is happening is very different, the end result of standing waves "trapped" in a tube will be very much like the end result of standing waves "trapped" on a string: a
harmonic series based on the tube length.
There will be more on that harmonic series in the
next section. First, let's talk about why only some standing waves will "fit" in a tube of a particular length. If the tube were closed on both ends, it's easy to see that this would be a lot like the wave on the string. The air would not be able to rush back and forth at the ends, so any wave trapped inside this tube would have to have nodes at each end.
Note:
It's very difficult to draw air that is rushing back and forth in some places and standing still in other places, so most of the figures below use a common illustration method, showing the longitudinal waves as if they are simultaneously the two maximum positions of a transverse wave. Here is an
animation that may give you some idea of what is happening in a longitudinal standing wave. As of this writing, there was a nice
Standing Waves applet demonstration of waves in tubes. Also, see
below for more explanation of what the transverse waves inside the tubes really represent.
Now, a closed tube wouldn't make a very good musical instrument; it wouldn't be very loud. Most of the sound you hear from an instrument is not the standing wave inside the tube; the sound is made at the open ends where the standing waves manage to create other waves that can move away from the instrument. Physicists sometimes study the acoustics of a tube closed at both ends (called a
Kundt tube), but most wind instruments have at least one open end. An instrument that is open at both ends may be called
open-open, or just an
open tube instrument. An instrument that is only open at one end may be called
open-closed, or a
closed tube or
stopped tube instrument (or sometimes
semi-closed or
half-closed). This is a little confusing, since such instruments (
trumpets, for example) still obviously have one open end.
Now, there's nothing stopping the air from rushing back and forth at the open end of the tube. In fact, the waves that "fit" the tube are the ones that have antinodes at the open end, so the air is in fact rushing back and forth there, causing waves (at the same
frequency as the standing wave) that are not trapped in the instrument but can go out into the room.
What is it that requires the waves to have an antinode at an open end? Look again at the
animation of what is happening to the air particles in the standing wave. The air at the nodes is not moving back and forth, but it is piling up and spreading out again. So the
air pressure is changing a lot at the nodes. But at the antinodes, the air is moving a lot, but it is moving back and forth, not piling up and spreading out. In fact, you can imagine that same wave to be an air pressure wave instead of an air displacement wave. It really is both at the same time, but the pressure wave nodes are at the same place as the displacement antinodes, and the pressure antinodes are at the same place as the displacement nodes.
At an open end of the tube, there is nothing to stop the air rushing in and out, and so it does. What the air cannot do at the open end is build up any pressure; there is nothing for the air to build up against, and any drop in pressure will just bring air rushing in from outside the tube. So the air pressure at an open end must remain the same as the air pressure of the room. In other words, that end must have a pressure node (where the air pressure doesn't change) and (therefore) a displacement antinode.
Note:
Since being exposed to the air pressure outside the instrument is what is important, the "open end" of a wind instrument, as far as the sound waves are concerned, is the first place that they can escape - the first open hole. This is how
woodwinds change the length of the wave, and the pitch of the note. For more on this, please see
Wind Instruments – Some Basics.
Harmonic Series in Tubes
As explained in the
previous section, the standing waves in a tube must have a (displacement) node at a closed end and an antinode at an open end. In an open-open tube, this leads to a
harmonic series very similar to a harmonic series produced on a
string that's held at both ends. The
fundamental, the lowest note possible in the tube, is the note with a wavelength twice the length of the tube (or string). The next possible note has twice the frequency (half the wavelength) of the fundamental, the next three times the frequency, the next four times, and so on.
But things are a little different for the tube that is closed at one end and open at the other. The lowest note that you might be able to get on such a tube (a fundamental that is unplayable on many instruments) has a wavelength four times the length of the tube. (You may notice that this means that a stopped tube will get a note half the
frequency - an
octave lower - than an open tube of the same length.) The next note that is possible on the half-closed tube has three times the frequency of the fundamental, the next five times,and so on. In other words, a stopped tube can only play the odd-numbered harmonics.
reminder: All of the transverse waves in
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 5, and
Figure 6 represent longitudinal displacement waves, as shown in
Figure 7. All of the harmonics would be happening in the tube at the same time, and, for each harmonic, the displacement (
Figure 7) and pressure waves (
Figure 8) are just two different ways of representing the same wave.
Basic Wind Instrument Tube Types
The previous section shows why only the odd-numbered harmonics "fit" in a cylinder-shaped tube, but that is not the whole story. There is one other tube shape that works well for wind instruments, and it abides by slightly different rules.
Just as on a
string, the actual wave inside the instrument is a complex wave that includes all of those possible
harmonics. A cylinder makes a good musical instrument because all the waves in the tube happen to have simple, harmonic-series-type relationships. This becomes very useful when the player
overblows in order to get more notes. As mentioned above, woodwind players get different notes out of their instruments by opening and closing finger holes, making the standing wave tube longer or shorter. Once the player has used all the holes, higher notes are played by
overblowing, which causes the next higher harmonic of the tube to sound. In other words, the fundamental of the tube is not heard when the player "overblows"; the note heard is the pitch of the next available harmonic (either harmonic two or three). Brass players can get many different harmonics from their instruments, and so do not need as many fingerings. (Please see
Harmonic Series and
Wind Instruments – Some Basics for more on this.)
For most possible tube shapes, a new set of holes would be needed to get notes that are in tune with the lower set of notes. But a couple of shapes, including the cylinder, give higher notes that are basically in tune with the lower notes using the same finger holes (or valves). (Even so, some extra finger holes or an extra slide or valve is sometimes necessary for good tuning.) One other possible shape is basically not used because it would be difficult to build precisely and unwieldy to play. (Basically, it has to flare rapidly, at a very specific rate of flare. The resulting instrument would be unwieldy and impractical. Please see John S. Rigden's
Physics and the Sound of Music, as cited
below for more on this.)
The other tube shape that is often used in wind instruments is the cone. In fact, most real wind instruments are tubes that are some sort of combination of cylindrical and conical tubes. But most can be classified as either cylindrical or conical instruments.
The really surprising thing is that stopped-tube instruments that are basically conical act as if they are open-tube cylindrical instruments.
Note:
The math showing why this happens has been done, but I will not go into it here. Please see the
further reading, below for books with a more rigorous and in-depth discussion of the subject.
Compare, for example, the clarinet and the saxophone, woodwinds with very similar mouthpieces. Both instruments, like any basic woodwind, have enough finger holes and keys to play all the notes within an octave. To get more notes, a woodwind player
overblows, blowing hard enough to sound the next harmonic of the instrument. For the saxophone, a very conical instrument, the next harmonic is the next
octave (two times the frequency of the fundamental), and the saxophonist can continue up this next octave by essentially repeating the fingerings for the first octave. Only a few extra keys are needed to help with tuning.
The clarinet player doesn't have it so easy. Because the clarinet is a very cylindrical instrument, the next harmonic available is three times the frequency, or an octave and a
fifth higher, than the fundamental. Extra holes and keys have to be added to the instrument to get the notes in that missing fifth, and then even more keys are added to help the clarinetist get around the awkward fingerings that can ensue. Many notes have several possible fingerings, and the player must choose fingerings based on tuning and ease of motion as they change notes.
So why bother with cylindrical instruments? Remember that an actual note from any instrument is a very complex sound wave that includes lots of harmonics. The pitch that we hear when a wind instrument plays a note is (usually) the lowest harmonic that is being produced in the tube at the time. The higher harmonics produce the
timbre, or sound color, of the instrument. A saxophone-shaped instrument simply can't get that odd-harmonics clarinet sound.
The shapes and sounds of the instruments that are popular today are the result of centuries of trial-and-error experimentation by instrument-makers. Some of them understood something of the physics involved, but the actual physics of real instruments - once you add sound holes, valves, keys, mouthpieces, and bells - are incredibly complex, and theoretical physicists are still studying the subject and making new discoveries.