Tension
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In physics, tension is a force on a body directed to produce strain (extension); it can be considered to be negative compression. It is measured in according units (newton, dynes, pounds-force, etc). Tension is the dominant static force acting on such objects as a vibrating string or a stretched rubber band.
Hooke's law states the relation between the stress on an object and the resultant increase in its length. The modulus of elasticity of a spring or elastic string can be used to calculate the force it exerts under a specific extension.
The word 'tension' is also sometimes used to refer to electrical voltage; this is the usage in the term high-tension line. Colloquially, 'tension' is used to refer to physiological or mental stress.
In music tension is the perceived need for relaxation or release (Sturm und Drang) created by a listener's expectations as well as dissonance, repetition, tempo, a gradual rise in pitch, and other factors.
See also
External link
- A Connectionist Approach to Driving Chord Progressions Using Tension (http://www.soi.city.ac.uk/~geraint/papers/afm-aisb.pdf) by Andrés Melo and Geraint Wiggins, .PDF formatde:Spannung