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While the traveling-wave solution for the ideal vibrating string is
fully general, and remains the basis for the most efficient known
string synthesis algorithms, an important alternate formulation is in
terms of modal expansions, that is, a superposition sum of
orthogonal basis functions which solve the differential equation and
obey the boundary conditions. Daniel Bernoulli (1700-1782)
developed the notion that string vibrations
can be expressed as the superposition of an infinite number of
harmonic vibrations [103].A.5This approach ultimately evolved to Hilbert spaces of orthogonal basis
functions that are solutions of Hermitian linear operators--a
formulation at the heart of quantum mechanics describing what can be
observed in nature [112,543]. In computational acoustic
modeling, Sturm-Liouville theory has been used to give improved models
of nonuniform acoustic tubes such as horns [50], and to
provide spatial transforms analogous to the Laplace transform
[363].
In the field of computer music, the introduction of modal
synthesis is credited to Adrien [5]. More generally, a
modal synthesis model is perhaps best formulated via a diagonalized
state-space formulation
[562,221,107].A.6 A more recent
technique, which has also been used to derive modal synthesis models,
is the so-called functional transformation method
[363,503,502].
In this approach, physically meaningful transfer functions are mapped
from continuous to discrete time in a way which preserves desired
physical parametric controls.
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