thumb|Diesis on C .

thumb|Diesis as three just major thirds.

In classical music from Western culture, a diesis ( or enharmonic diesis, plural dieses ( , or "difference"; Greek: "leak" or "escape"

is either an accidental (see sharp), or a very small musical interval, usually defined as the difference between an octave (in the ratio 2:1) and three justly tuned major thirds (tuned in the ratio 5:4), equal to 128:125 or about 41.06 cents. In 12-tone equal temperament (on a piano for example) three major thirds in a row equal an octave, but three justly-tuned major thirds fall quite a bit narrow of an octave, and the diesis describes the amount by which they are short.

For instance, an octave (2:1) spans from C to C′, and three justly tuned major thirds (5:4) span from C to B (namely, from C, to E, to G, to B). The difference between C-C′ (2:1) and C-B (125:64) is the diesis (128:125). Notice that this coincides with the interval between B and C′, also called a diminished second.

As a comma, the above-mentioned 128:125 ratio is also known as the lesser diesis, enharmonic comma, or augmented comma.

Many acoustics texts use the term greater diesis<!-- Very little in the preceding text is verified by A.B.'s entry in the Harvard Dictionary. In particular, "three syntonic commas minus a schisma", the bit about 19&nbsp;equal temperament, and the values 62.57 and 41.06&nbsp;cents: A.B. gives these to just one significant figure. -->

{| align="center"

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| thumb|center|467 px|Diesis defined in [[quarter-comma meantone as a diminished second ( 41.1&nbsp;cents), or an interval between two enharmonically equivalent notes (from D to C). ]]

|}

Alternative definitions

In any tuning system, the deviation of an octave from three major thirds, however large that is, is typically referred to as a diminished second. The diminished second is an interval between pairs of enharmonically equivalent notes; for instance the interval between E and F. As mentioned above, the term diesis most commonly refers to the diminished second in quarter-comma meantone temperament. Less frequently and less strictly, the same term is also used to refer to a diminished second of any size. In third-comma meantone, the diminished second is typically denoted as a greater diesis (see below).

In quarter-comma meantone, since major thirds are justly tuned, the width of the diminished second coincides with the above-mentioned value of 128:125. Notice that 128:125 is larger than a unison (1:1). This means that, for instance, C′ is sharper than B. In other tuning systems, the diminished second has different widths, and may be smaller than a unison (e.g. C′ may be flatter than B:

:{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"

! Name !! Ratio !! cents !! Typical use

|-

| greater limma || ||align=“right”| 92.18

|align="left"| ratio of two major whole tones to a minor third

|-

| greater diesis || ||align=“right”| 62.57

|align="left"| third-comma meantone<br/>(discussed below)

|-

| lesser diesis || ||align=“right”| 41.06

|align="left"| (discussed below)

|-

| 31&nbsp; diesis || 2 ||align=“right”| 38.71

|align="left"| step-size in 31 equal temperament

|-

| Pythagorean<br/>comma || ||align=“right”| 23.46

|align="left"| Pythagorean tuning

|-

| diatonic comma || ||align=“right”| 21.51

|align="left"| ratio of 4&nbsp;fifths to a major third and 2&nbsp;octaves;<br/> measure of fifth tempering in well temperaments

|-

| diaschisma || ||align=“right”| 19.55

|align="left"| sixth-comma meantone

|-

| schisma || ||align=“right”| 1.95

|align="left"| eleventh-comma meantone;<br/> limit of acoustic tuning accuracy

|}

In eleventh-comma meantone, the diminished second is within (0.14%) of a cent above unison, so it closely resembles the 1:1 unison ratio of twelve-tone equal temperament.

The word diesis has also been used to describe several distinct intervals, of varying sizes, but typically around 50&nbsp;cents. Philolaus used it to describe the interval now usually called a limma, that of a justly tuned perfect fourth (4:3) minus two whole tones (9:8), equal to 256:243 or about 90.22&nbsp;cents. Rameau (1722)

Septimal and undecimal diesis

The septimal diesis (or slendro diesis) is an interval with the ratio of 49:48 , which is the difference between the septimal whole tone and the septimal minor third. It is about 35.70&nbsp;cents wide.

The undecimal diesis is equal to 45:44 or about 38.91&nbsp;cents, closely approximated by 31 equal temperament's 38.71&nbsp;cent half-sharp () interval.

Footnotes

See also

  • chromatic diesis
  • septimal diesis
  • ditone

References