"Having said that, what I think I'm now understanding is that the "tuning" process is actually adjusting the "size" of the fields (electrical? electro-magnetic? electro-something?) within which the players hands control the sound. This is done for the Theremin to accommodate the different physical characteristics and playing styles of each individual player. Close??" - gp
Hi,
As to tuning the EW, I think you are ok in the hands of Dewster and Thierry ;-) They are also able to answer the above, but its an area I like blabbing about and confusing everyone! ;-)
Its not electro-magnetic, or magnetic, or any stuff like that.. its electrical or electrostatic or capacitive .. and what the player is effectively doing is being a grounded capacitor plate -
Capacitance is the effect one gets between two (or more) conductors - two "plates" will capacitively couple - If one has one plate and connects it to + Volts and connects the other to - Volts, these plates will charge up, current will flow, but the current wont flow across the plates.. its an unseen 'force' between the plates which are insulated from each other by a "dielectric"
The theremin antennas are "plates" and the players hands are "plates" connected or coupled to ground.. The Capacitance is determined by the overlapping area of the respective plates and the distance between them..
And in a theremin these plates form part of tuned circuits, the frequency of these circuits being controlled primarily by the distance between the players "plates" (hands) and the theremins "plates (antennas).
Essentially its electrostatic, I think in radio terminology its refered to as electrical force.. But if you want more depth search capacitance here, or google for it and for LC resonance or AC Circuit theory - theres loads ;-) .. Electrostatic as a search word will bring up more about high voltage discharge effects and the like which is a lot less relevant.
I will perhaps post some links in a ps on this posting later.
Fred.
This: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LC_circuit is a much better description than what follows
-||- is a capacitor, and on a theremin its formed by player and antenna..
A simple visual analogy to capacitance would be a pipe with a flexible membrane across it so that water cannot pass .. one can still get "flow" or movement of water if both ends are filled and go to some pump which "pushes" water from one direction, causing the membrane to stretch, then reverses direction and allows the energy from the stretched membrane to be recovered into pushing the flow in the other direction, again stretching the membrane, but at the opposite polarity.. I dont wish to 'stretch' this analogy too far, but if the membrane was the dielectric (air) between the antenna and the hand, then altering its thickness (distance) changes the rate at which the system oscillates....
The above is NOT whats happening, but it gives perhaps a basic visual "analogy" - the "pump" would be the coil and oscillator circuit, which provides a little extra oomph to keep things going and compensate natures losses .. like pushing a pendulum or swing...