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Helmholtz Resonator

Object Details

Views
86,860
Video Title
Helmholtz Resonator
Description
Observe a demonstration of Helmholtz Resonators from the Physical Science Collection at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History. This is a set of 16 Helmholtz resonators. Made from sections of brass that were spun on a lathe, they are wonderfully light and easy to hold. Helmholtz designed them to demonstrate his theory that all vowel and musical sounds are composed of combinations of simple, pure notes (Helmholtz's "Theory of Timbre"). He correctly observed that musical sounds, particularly the higher tones, are often perceived as a single mass of sound. But with these resonators, even people with no musical training could easily pick out the simple, pure tones, even when they were faint and mixed with other sounds. Each resonator was carefully tuned to respond to only a single frequency. For the person using it, the resonance would occur quite suddenly, with an unmistakable amplification of a particular sound. To use these resonators, the small end was inserted directly into the ear and sealed with a bit of warm wax. The other ear was also sealed with a wax plug. Once this was done, Helmholtz wrote: "most of the tones produced in the surrounding air will be considerably damped; but if the proper tone of the resonator is sounded, it brays into the ear most powerfully."
Video Duration
41 sec
YouTube Keywords
smithsonian "american history" history museum
Data Source
National Museum of American History
YouTube Channel
SmithsonianAmHistory
Uploaded
2012-05-08T17:35:02.000Z
Creator
National Museum of American History
Type
YouTube Videos
See more by
SmithsonianAmHistory
YouTube Category
Education
Topic
American History
Record ID
yt_A9XLNH8FPd0
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Open daily 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Admission is always free!

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Washington, DC 20002

Our entrance is on the corner of First Street and Massachusetts Avenue NE.

street map of Postal museum

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