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In order to get the necessary constant reinforcement, the container has to be the perfect size (length) for a certain wavelength, so that waves bouncing back or being produced at each end reinforce each other, instead of interfering with each other and cancelling each other out. And it really helps to keep the container very narrow, so that you don't have to worry about waves bouncing off the sides and complicating things. So you have a bunch of regularly-spaced waves that are trapped, bouncing back and forth in a container that fits their wavelength perfectly. If you could watch these waves, it would not even look as if they are traveling back and forth. Instead, waves would seem to be appearing and disappearing regularly at exactly the same spots, so these trapped waves are called standing waves .

Although standing waves are harder to get in water, the phenomenon does apparently happen very rarely in lakes, resulting in freak disasters. You can sometimes get the same effect by pushing a tub of water back and forth, but this is a messy experiment; you'll know you are getting a standing wave when the water suddenly starts sloshing much higher - right out of the tub!

For any narrow "container" of a particular length, there are plenty of possible standing waves that don't fit. But there are also many standing waves that do fit. The longest wave that fits it is called the fundamental . It is also called the first harmonic . The next longest wave that fits is the second harmonic , or the first overtone . The next longest wave is the third harmonic , or second overtone , and so on.

Standing wave harmonics

There is a whole set of standing waves, called harmonics , that will fit into any "container" of a specific length. This set of waves is called a harmonic series .

Notice that it doesn't matter what the length of the fundamental is; the waves in the second harmonic must be half the length of the first harmonic; that's the only way they'll both "fit". The waves of the third harmonic must be a third the length of the first harmonic, and so on. This has a direct effect on the frequency and pitch of harmonics, and so it affects the basics of music tremendously. To find out more about these subjects, please see Frequency, Wavelength, and Pitch , Harmonic Series , or Musical Intervals, Frequency, and Ratio .

Standing waves on strings

You may have noticed an interesting thing in the animation of standing waves: there are spots where the "water" goes up and down a great deal, and other spots where the "water level" doesn't seem to move at all. All standing waves have places, called nodes , where there is no wave motion, and antinodes , where the wave is largest. It is the placement of the nodes that determines which wavelengths "fit" into a musical instrument "container".

Nodes and antinodes

As a standing wave waves back and forth (from the red to the blue position), there are some spots called nodes that do not move at all; basically there is no change, no waving up-and-down (or back-and-forth), at these spots. The spots at the biggest part of the wave - where there is the most change during each wave - are called antinodes .

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Source:  OpenStax, Understanding basic music theory. OpenStax CNX. Jan 10, 2007 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10363/1.3
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