šŸŽ‰ Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

O-R-G: After His Beautiful Machine of 1855 by David Reinfurt

Product image 1
1 / 4

O-R-G: After His Beautiful Machine of 1855 by David Reinfurt

NB: Please note this is a digital product. Once your order is processed, you will be emailed a PDF with install instructions. Should you desire hard mailing, please include the instruction with your order.

******

Two signals of varying frequency and phase result in a perpetual infinity, drawing and redrawing over and over. The familiar shapes are called Lissajous curves after mathematician Jules Antoine Lissajous and his ā€œbeautiful machineā€ of 1855.

Devised to draw a picture of two superimposed systems falling into and out of phase, the machine was constructed from a pair of tuning forks placed at right angles, each with a mirror attached. A light source is focused through a lens, bouncing off the first onto the second and projecting to a large screen. As the tuning forks are struck, simple vibrations move the mirrors in a regular oscillating pattern. The projected image forms the strange and beautiful curves of a Lissajous figure.

(Text courtesy O-R-G.)

$25.00
O-R-G: After His Beautiful Machine of 1855 by David Reinfurt—
$25.00

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

NB: Please note this is a digital product. Once your order is processed, you will be emailed a PDF with install instructions. Should you desire hard mailing, please include the instruction with your order.

******

Two signals of varying frequency and phase result in a perpetual infinity, drawing and redrawing over and over. The familiar shapes are called Lissajous curves after mathematician Jules Antoine Lissajous and his ā€œbeautiful machineā€ of 1855.

Devised to draw a picture of two superimposed systems falling into and out of phase, the machine was constructed from a pair of tuning forks placed at right angles, each with a mirror attached. A light source is focused through a lens, bouncing off the first onto the second and projecting to a large screen. As the tuning forks are struck, simple vibrations move the mirrors in a regular oscillating pattern. The projected image forms the strange and beautiful curves of a Lissajous figure.

(Text courtesy O-R-G.)