40edo: Difference between revisions
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While 40edo has two intervals that can be considered a perfect fifth, its [[patent]] 3/2 is the flat, diatonic one. The 7th harmonic is similar, with the [[7/4]] inherited from 5edo (960{{c}}) being a closer approximation compared to a very sharp mapping at 990{{c}}; as is the 11th. However, 40edo approximates [[5/4]] rather well, with its 390{{c}} interval, and due to being a multiple of [[10edo]] and [[4edo]], it represents the 13th and 19th harmonics through those EDOs' respective approximations. | While 40edo has two intervals that can be considered a perfect fifth, its [[patent]] 3/2 is the flat, diatonic one. The 7th harmonic is similar, with the [[7/4]] inherited from 5edo (960{{c}}) being a closer approximation compared to a very sharp mapping at 990{{c}}; as is the 11th. However, 40edo approximates [[5/4]] rather well, with its 390{{c}} interval, and due to being a multiple of [[10edo]] and [[4edo]], it represents the 13th and 19th harmonics through those EDOs' respective approximations. | ||
Therefore, the case is not dissimilar to [[29edo]]'s treatment of harmonics 5, 7, 11, and 13, as 40edo's patent mappings of 3, 7, and 11 are relatively unambiguous, though damaged, and approximately equally flat. Combining this with primes 5, 13, 19, and 23, we find that 40edo approximates a rather broad [[subgroup]] of 2.5.7/3.11/3.13.19.23, and a consistent slight sharp tendency for the basis elements in this group. | Therefore, the case is not dissimilar to [[29edo]]'s treatment of harmonics 5, 7, 11, and 13, as 40edo's patent mappings of 3, 7, and 11 are relatively unambiguous, though damaged, and approximately equally flat. Combining this with primes 5, 13, 19, and 23, we find that 40edo approximates a rather broad [[subgroup]] of 2.5.7/3.11/3.13.19.23, and has a consistent slight sharp tendency for most of the basis elements in this group. | ||
As 40edo approximates 9 better than it does 3, a slight extension of this group would be to treat 40edo as a dual-{3 7 11 17}, implying 9, 21, 33, and 51 as basis elements; this is the interpretation as a subset of [[80edo]]. Of course, the patent approximations can still be used, an interesting consequence of which is that [[6/5]] is mapped to the quarter-octave (300{{c}}), like it is in [[12edo]] (though note that this is not the best 6/5, the 330{{c}} interval being slightly closer). | As 40edo approximates 9 better than it does 3, a slight extension of this group would be to treat 40edo as a dual-{3 7 11 17}, implying 9, 21, 33, and 51 as basis elements; this is the interpretation as a subset of [[80edo]]. Of course, the patent approximations can still be used, an interesting consequence of which is that [[6/5]] is mapped to the quarter-octave (300{{c}}), like it is in [[12edo]] (though note that this is not the best 6/5, the 330{{c}} interval being slightly closer). | ||
Revision as of 23:25, 4 March 2026
40edo, or 40 equal divisions of the octave (sometimes called 40-TET or 40-tone equal temperament), is the equal tuning featuring steps of (1200/40) ~= 30 cents, 40 of which stack to the perfect octave 2/1.
40edo is a straddle-3, or dual-3, system, as it has both the 5edo fifth of 720¢, and a very flat diatonic fifth at 690¢, being the smallest 5n EDO to have a diatonic perfect fifth.
General theory
JI approximation
While 40edo has two intervals that can be considered a perfect fifth, its patent 3/2 is the flat, diatonic one. The 7th harmonic is similar, with the 7/4 inherited from 5edo (960¢) being a closer approximation compared to a very sharp mapping at 990¢; as is the 11th. However, 40edo approximates 5/4 rather well, with its 390¢ interval, and due to being a multiple of 10edo and 4edo, it represents the 13th and 19th harmonics through those EDOs' respective approximations.
Therefore, the case is not dissimilar to 29edo's treatment of harmonics 5, 7, 11, and 13, as 40edo's patent mappings of 3, 7, and 11 are relatively unambiguous, though damaged, and approximately equally flat. Combining this with primes 5, 13, 19, and 23, we find that 40edo approximates a rather broad subgroup of 2.5.7/3.11/3.13.19.23, and has a consistent slight sharp tendency for most of the basis elements in this group.
As 40edo approximates 9 better than it does 3, a slight extension of this group would be to treat 40edo as a dual-{3 7 11 17}, implying 9, 21, 33, and 51 as basis elements; this is the interpretation as a subset of 80edo. Of course, the patent approximations can still be used, an interesting consequence of which is that 6/5 is mapped to the quarter-octave (300¢), like it is in 12edo (though note that this is not the best 6/5, the 330¢ interval being slightly closer).
| Harmonic | 2 | 3 | 5 | 7 | 11 | 13 | 17 | 19 | 23 | 29 | 31 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Error | Absolute (¢) | 0.0 | -12.0 | +3.7 | -8.8 | -11.3 | -0.5 | -15.0 | +2.5 | +1.7 | -9.6 | -5.0 |
| Relative (%) | 0.0 | -39.9 | +12.3 | -29.4 | -37.7 | -1.8 | -49.9 | +8.3 | +5.8 | -31.9 | -16.8 | |
| Steps
(reduced) |
40
(0) |
63
(23) |
93
(13) |
112
(32) |
138
(18) |
148
(28) |
163
(3) |
170
(10) |
181
(21) |
194
(34) |
198
(38) | |
Edostep interpretations
Intervals and notation
Compositional theory
Chords
Scales
| View • Talk • EditEqual temperaments | |
|---|---|
| EDOs | |
| Macrotonal | 5 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 |
| 12-23 | 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 • 16 • 17 • 18 • 19 • 20 • 21 • 22 • 23 |
| 24-35 | 24 • 25 • 26 • 27 • 29 • 31 • 32 • 34 • 35 |
| 36-47 | 36 • 37 • 39 • 40 • 41 • 43 • 44 • 45 • 46 • 47 |
| 48-59 | 48 • 50 • 51 • 53 • 54 • 56 • 57 • 58 |
| 60-71 | 60 • 63 • 64 • 65 • 67 • 68 • 70 |
| 72-83 | 72 • 77 • 80 • 81 |
| 84-95 | 84 • 87 • 89 • 90 • 93 • 94 |
| Large EDOs | 99 • 104 • 111 • 118 • 130 • 140 • 152 • 159 • 171 • 217 • 224 • 239 • 270 • 306 • 311 • 612 • 665 |
| Nonoctave equal temperaments | |
| Tritave | 4 • 9 • 13 • 17 • 26 • 39 |
| Fifth | 8 • 9 • 11 • 20 |
| Other | |
