LOL! ;-) - Is there such a thing as a properly grounded thereminist?
joking aside.. I am not surprised that this aspect of the dynamics of capacitive coupling is not common knowledge amongst thereminists.. These are invisible and complex forces, and the majority of people only have a vague idea about what capacitance is.. it is complex enough with just 2 'plates' to think about, but a thereminist is equivalent to a third 'floating' isolated 'plate' between the antenna 'plates' and the grounded 'plates' - if one tried to compute your effective contribution to ground capacitance while playing, you would be somewhat distracted! ;-)
But here is the bottom line..
The stronger the "invariable" coupling of the players body to ground, the less important variable capacitive coupling (via capacitive coupling of the body, arms, hands etc to grounded objects - such as the theremin itself or cables etc) will become.
If the primary coupling of the thereminist to ground is via anything which moves, then this movement will change the pitch/volume almost as much as if it was a movement directly related to the antenna/s.
I did not realize the importance of variable ground coupling until I did my post-mortem on my Epsilon multi-dimensional controller, and discovered this to be a fairly major factor in its poor operation..
I will now go off on one of my long-winded theses.. LOL! ;-)
There are 4 primary sources of ground coupling for the thereminist – these are:
C1.) coupling via feet / body to the floor and other large grounded objects such as walls, and to cables etc. This is usually quite constant and stable, and quite large.
C2.) coupling of the thereminists body to the theremin, amplifier, cables etc – If the thereminist does not move his/her body, this is constant – moving towards these objects will increase the ground coupling, moving away will reduce it.
C3.) Coupling of the pitch hand / arm to the ground components of the theremin – This variable grounding does not cause a problem, as it is part of the thereminists pitch control loop, and will be corrected automatically, and go unnoticed.
C4.) Coupling of the volume hand / arm to the ground components of the theremin – This variable grounding CAN cause a problem, as it is not part of the thereminists pitch control loop.
The extent to which C4 influences the players grounding (and therefore influences pitch) is dependent on C1 (and C2).. If C1 and C2 are low, the effect will be greater.
Examples:
C1 = 100pF, C4 varies between 0.01pf and 0.1pf.
Players capacitance to ground will vary between 100.1 and 100.01pF so the ground capacitance will vary by about 0.1% as a result of movement of the volume arm..
Fortunately this capacitance will be in series with the capacitance between the pitch antenna and hand, which reduces the effect greatly – so if, for example, this capacitance is 0.2pf, then the capacitance to ground ‘seen’ by the pitch antenna will vary from 0.199601196 to 0.199600838 pf or 0.000179%
Now, for C1 = 10pF, C4 varies between 0.01pf and 0.1pf. with pitch antenna – hand at 0.2pf:
Players capacitance to ground will vary between 10.1 and 10.01pF so the ground capacitance will vary by about 1% as a result of movement of the volume arm..
capacitance to ground ‘seen’ by the pitch antenna will vary from 0.196116505 to 0.196082272 pf or 0.017455% which is significant!
The greater the direct (unchanging) coupling of the player to ground, the less will be the influence of other (variable) couplings to ground.
Fred.
ps.. in answer to Carports question: "I'm curious as to whether one could play a theremin while falling through the sky?"
The answer is that the C2 (coupling between theremin and [falling] therem