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Altered Sensations: Rudolph Koenig's Acoustical Workshop in Nineteenth-Century Paris (Archimedes #24)

Altered Sensations: Rudolph Koenig's Acoustical Workshop in Nineteenth-Century Paris (Archimedes #24)

Current price: $209.99
This product is not returnable.
Publication Date: March 14th, 2012
Publisher:
Springer
ISBN:
9789400730618
Pages:
372
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Description

Introduction

Workshops in the history of science

Showroom: The business of instrument making

Laboratory: Instrument making and experimentation

Life as an instrument maker

Sound in history

Chapter 1 - Training

Journey to Paris

Vuillaume's violin workshop - 1851-1858

From violins to tuning forks

The scientific instrument trade in Paris

Chapter 2 - Hermann von Helmholtz and the Sensations of Tone

Hermann von Helmholtz

Physical acoustics - theory and instruments (tuning forks, tonometer, double siren)

Instruments as agents of change

Experimental results

Physiological acoustics - the piano as a model for the inner ear

Psychological acoustics - resonators as aids for hearing simple tones

The first sound synthesizer

A theory of harmony and music

Chapter 3 - Transformations in the workshop

Inside Parisian workshops

The phonautograph and the origins of graphical acoustics

Precision and graphical acoustics

The "Plaque tournante"at Rue Hautefeuille: Transforming Helmholtz's acoustics Demonstrating Helmholtz: Adam Politzer and Koenig at the Acad mie des Sciences Manometric flame capsule and optical acoustics

Chapter 4 - The market and its influences

The first year of business - from the workshop to the classroom

1862 London Exhibition

Selling Helmholtz's instruments

Function replaces beauty: 1867 Exposition in Paris.

Americans at the Fair. William B. Rogers, Alexander Graham Bell and MIT

The Parisian science monopoly and a Portuguese customer

Chapter 5 - Constructing a reputation, 1866-1879

Measuring the velocity of sound in the sewers of Paris

Creating vowel sounds out of wood, brass and steel

Seeing a voice: manometric vowel studies

Extending the tonometer one file mark at a time

Choosing the right steel

Bringing the workshop into combination-tone studies

Precision and livelihood under attack: the Koenig clock fork

Chapter 6 - Expanding the North American Market, 1871-1882.

Recovery from the turmoil of 1870-71

Third catalogue, 1873

Joseph Henry and the Smithsonian Institution

Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, 1876

James Loudon and the University of Toronto

"Cette ville de malheur"

Public lectures at Toronto

Chapter 7 - The Faraday of sound

Life at Quai d'Anjou: 1882-1901

The combination-tone controversy in England

Workshop as theatre

Heidelberg 1889: the German response

The dispute over timbre

Wave sirens

Back to vibrations

Ultrasonics and le domaine de la fantaisie

Conclusion - Beyond Sensations

Appendix 1. Key dates in Rudolph Koenig's life.

Catalogue Raisonn

I. The principal means for producing sound

II. Cause and nature of sound

III. Pitch of sounds

IV. Timbre of sound

V. Propagation of sound

VI. Simple vibrations of the different bodies

VII. Communications of vibrations - Vibrations of simple bodies - Compound vibrations in simple bodies

VIII. Phenomena due to the coexistance of two or more sounds in air

IX. Methods for studying sonorous vibrations without assistance of the ear

X. Apparatus for the mechanical representation of vibrations and wave movements

XI. Acoustic apparatus for practical use

Notes

References