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{{For|the french physicist named Félix Savart|Félix Savart}}
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[[Image:Six decades visualization.png|thumb|1/100 heptaméride (jot), 1/10 heptaméride (decameride), 1 heptamérides, 10 heptamérides, 100 heptamérides, 1,000 heptamérides (decade).]]
 
The '''savart''' {{IPAc-en|s|ə|ˈ|v|ɑr}} is a unit of measurement for musical [[list of pitch intervals|pitch intervals]] ({{Audio|Savart on C.mid|play}}). One savart is equal to one thousandth of a [[decade (log scale)|decade]] ([[just major third|10/1]]: 3,986.313714 cents): 3.9863 cents.  Today the savart has largely been replaced by the [[cent (music)|cent]] and the [[millioctave]]. The savart is practically the same as the earlier '''heptameride''' (eptameride), one seventh of a '''meride'''. [[Powers of 10|One tenth]] of an heptameride is a '''decameride''' and a hundredth of an heptameride (thousandth of a decade) is a '''jot'''.
 
==Definition==
 
If <math>\frac{f_2}{f_1}</math> is the ratio of [[frequency|frequencies]] of a given interval, the corresponding measure in savarts is given by:
 
<math>s = 1000 \log_{10}{\frac{f_2}{f_1}}</math>
 
or
 
<math>\frac{f_2}{f_1} = 10^{s/1000}</math>
 
Like the more common cent, the savart is a [[logarithm]]ic measure, and thus intervals can be added by simply adding their savart values, instead of multiplying them as you would frequencies. The number of savarts in an octave is 1000 times the base-10 logarithm of 2, or nearly 301.03. Sometimes this is rounded to 300, which makes the unit more useful for [[equal temperament]].<ref name="hf">{{cite web|url=http://www.huygens-fokker.org/docs/measures.html|title=Logarithmic Interval Measures|author=Huygens-Fokker Foundation|authorlink=Huygens-Fokker Foundation|accessdate=2007-06-13 |<!-- archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070214012515/http://www.xs4all.nl/~huygensf/doc/measures.html --> <!-- Bot retrieved archive |archivedate = 2007-02-14 -->}}</ref>
 
==Conversion==
 
The conversion from savarts into cents or millioctaves is rather simple:
 
<math>1\ \mathrm{savart} = \frac{1.2}{\log_{10}{2}}\ \mathrm{cent} \approx 3.9863\ \mathrm{cent}</math>
 
<math>1\ \mathrm{savart} = \frac{1}{\log_{10}{2}}\ \mathrm{millioctave} \approx 3.3219\ \mathrm{millioctave}</math>
 
==History==
 
The savart is named after the French physicist and doctor [[Félix Savart]] (1791–1841) who advocated the earlier similar interval of the French acoustician [[Joseph Sauveur]] (1653–1716). Sauveur proposed the ''méride'', ''eptaméride'' (or ''heptaméride''), and ''decaméride''.  In English these are meride, heptameride, and decameride respectively.  The octave is divided into 43 merides, the meride is divided into seven heptamerides, and the heptameride is divided into ten decamerides. There are thus {{nowrap|43 &times; 7 {{=}} 301}} heptamerides in an octave.<ref>Hermann von Helmholtz (1912). ''On the sensations of tone as a physiological basis for the theory of music'', p.437. Longmans, Green.</ref> The attraction of this scheme to Sauveur was that log<sub>10</sub>(2) is very close to .301, and thus the number of heptamerides in a given ratio is found to a high degree of accuracy from simply its log times 1000.  This is equivalent to assuming 1000 heptamerides in a decade rather than 301 in an octave, the same as Savart's definition.  The unit was given the name ''savart'' sometime in the 20th century.<ref name="hf"/>  A disadvantage of this scheme is that there are not an exact number of heptamerides/savarts in an [[equal tempered]] semitoneFor this reason Alexander Wood used a modified definition of the savart, with 300 savarts in an octave, and hence 25 savarts in a semitone.<ref>Alexander Wood, ''The Physics of Music'', pages 53-54, Read Books, 2007 ISBN 140674493X (first published Methuen, 1944 {{OCLC|220112916}}.</ref>
 
A related unit is the jot, of which there are 30103 in an octave, or approximately 100,000 in a decade.  The jot is defined in a similar way to the savart, but has a more accurate rounding of log<sub>10</sub>(2) because more digits are used.<ref>Joe Monzo, [http://tonalsoft.com/enc/h/heptameride.aspx "Heptaméride"] and [http://tonalsoft.com/enc/j/jot.aspx "Jot"], ''Tonalsoft Encyclopedia of Microtonal Music Theory'', retrieved and [http://www.webcitation.org/6BLS4KwYL archived][http://www.webcitation.org/6BLRsdAeS] 11 October 2012.</ref>  There are approximately 100 jots in a savart.  The unit was first described by [[Augustus de Morgan]] (1806-1871) which he called an ''atom''.  The name ''jot'' was coined by [[John Curwen]] (1816-1880) at the suggestion of [[Hermann von Helmholtz]].<ref>Hermann von Helmholtz, (trans. A. J. Ellis), ''On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music'', page 654, Longmans, 1875 {{OCLC|8101251}}.</ref>
 
==Comparison==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Name !! Steps per octave !! Cents !! Relative !! Interval !! Ratio !! Audio
|-
| Decade || 0.301030 || 3,986.313714 || 1,000 heptamérides || 10<sup>1/1</sup> || 10.000000 || {{audio|Decade on C.mid|Play}}
|-
| Méride || 43.004285 || 27.904196 || 7 heptamérides || 10<sup>7/1,000</sup> || 1.016249 || {{audio|Meride on C.mid|Play}}
|-
| Heptaméride || 301.029996 || 3.986314 || 1/1,000 decade, 1/7 méride, 10 decamérides, or 100 jots || 10<sup>1/1,000</sup> || 1.002305 || {{audio|Savart on C.mid|Play}}
|-
| Demi-heptaméride || 602.059991 || 1.993157 || 1/2 heptaméride || 10<sup>1/2,000</sup> || 1.001152 || {{audio|Demi-heptameride on C.mid|Play}}
|-
| Decaméride || 3,010.299957 || 0.398631 || 1/10 heptaméride || 10<sup>1/10,000</sup> || 1.000230 || {{audio|Decameride on C.mid|Play}}
|-
| Jot || 30,102.999567 || 0.039863 || 1/100 heptaméride || 10<sup>1/100,000</sup> || 1.000023 || {{audio|Jot on C.mid|Play}}
|}
 
==See also==
{{Portal|Music}}
*[[Musical tuning]]
 
==Notes==
{{Reflist}}
 
{{Musical tuning|state=autocollapse}}
{{Intervals|state=autocollapse}}
 
[[Category:Equal temperaments]]
[[Category:Intervals]]
[[Category:Units of measurement]]

Revision as of 10:34, 14 February 2014

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