Accession No

3438


Brief Description

Cagniard de la Tour-type siren, made by Kerby, 1900


Origin

12 Spanns Buildings; St Pancras; London; England


Maker

Kerby


Class

sound


Earliest Date

1900


Latest Date

1900


Inscription Date


Material

metal (brass, steel)


Dimensions

height 220mm; breadth 60mm


Special Collection


Provenance

Purchased from Department of Physics, King’s College, London, England, 10/1986. Purchased with the assistance of a grant from PRISM Fund.


Inscription

‘KERBY
12 Spanns Buildings. St Pancras
LONDON’ (dial plate)


Description Notes

Cagniard de la Tour-type siren, made by Kerby, 1900.

brass cylinder handle with larger brass cylinder mounted upon it. Two brass pillars support the plate which carries the dials. The left hand dial is divided [0] - 2500, the right hand dial is divided [0] - 100000. A central shaft passes through the dial plate, down to the main brass cylinder; a rotatable steel disc with a circle of holes is set around the base of the steel rod.

Condition good; complete.


References


Events

Description
The siren is a device for the mechanical production of sound. The instrument is important in the history of the scientific study of sound because it was the first sound source developed that could produce many different sounds of known frequencies. Invented by the French Engineer and Physicist Charles Cagniard de la Tour in 1819, the instrument gets its name due to its ability to produce sound underwater (the Sirens were female creatures of Greek mythology that lured sailors to their deaths by sweet singing).

In its most simple form the siren consists of two metal disks, each perforated with equally spaced concentric holes. One disk forms the top of the “wind chest” while the other rotates close to the first. Air is forced through the system, which causes the upper disk to rotate, owing to the slanted bore of the holes. As the disk rotates the flow of air is periodically cut off and reinstated resulting in a regular emission of puffs of air. The ensuing fluctuations in air pressure set up simple sound waves of a specific frequency depending on the speed of rotation of the upper disk. De la Tour arranged for the upper disk to drive a counter that can show how many revolutions per second were produced. Knowing how many holes there are in the disks, and thus how many puffs of air per rotation, one can immediately calculate the exact frequency of the sound produced.

Originally the siren was developed for experiments in acoustics; notably, it was used extensively by the German physicist Herman von Helmholtz, featuring in his seminal 1863 work on acoustics, Die Lehre von den Tonempfindungen als physiologische Grundlage für die Theorie der Musik (On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music). Nowadays the siren (albeit in electronic versions) is used for danger warnings, but it has also been used in classical music, for instance in Edgar Varese’s composition Ionization.
08/05/2008
Created by: Dr. Torben Rees on 08/05/2008


FM:39464

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