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In every freely vibrating string, the fundamental frequency declines
over time as the amplitude of vibration decays. This is due to
tension modulation, which is often audible at the beginning of
plucked-string tones, especially for low-tension strings. It happens
because higher-amplitude vibrations stretch the string to a
longer average length, raising the average string tension
faster wave propagation
higher fundamental
frequency.
The are several methods in the literature for simulating tension
modulation in a digital waveguide string model
[498,234,512,516,517,499,285],
as well as in membrane models [300].
The methods can be classified into two categories, local and
global.
Local tension-modulation methods modulate the speed of sound locally
as a function of amplitude. For example, opposite delay cells in a
force-wave digital waveguide string can be summed to obtain the
instantaneous vertical force across that string sample, and the length
of the adjacent propagation delay can be modulated using a first-order
allpass filter. In principle the string slope reduces as the local
tension increases. (Recall from Chapter 6 or Appendix C
that force waves are minus the string tension times slope.)
Global tension-modulation methods [499,498]
essentially modulate the string delay-line length as a function of the
total energy in the string.
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