Jules Antoine Lissajous

Jules Antoine Lissajous



¥700Best Deal Ever
1.0.2for iPhone, iPad and more
9.9
1 Ratings
O-R-G inc.
Developer
1.2MB
Size
2022年03月03日
Update Date
Entertainment
Category
4+
Age Rating
Age Rating
4+
Apps in this category do not contain restricted content.
9+
Apps in this category may contain mild or occasional cartoon, fantasy or real-life violence, as well as occasional or mild adult, sexually suggestive or horrifying content and may not be suitable for children under 9 years of age.
12+
Apps in this category may contain occasional mild indecent language, frequent or intense cartoon or real-life violence, minor or occasional adult or sexually suggestive material, and simulated gambling, and may be for children under 12 years of age.
17+
You must be at least 17 years old to access this App.
Apps in this category may contain frequent and intense offensive language; Frequent and intense cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence: frequent and intense adult, scary and sexually suggestive subjects: as well as sexual content, nudity, tobacco, alcohol and drugs, may not be suitable for children under 17 years of age.
Jules Antoine Lissajous スクリーンショット
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Jules Antoine Lissajous ポスターJules Antoine Lissajous ポスターJules Antoine Lissajous ポスターJules Antoine Lissajous ポスター

About Jules Antoine Lissajous

Jules is an iOS app that draws Lissajous curves. By randomizing the constants of the curve's equations, it draws a new shape every two minutes.

Launch Jules. Double tap the screen of your device and move your finger up or down to change the speed at which Jules draws. Double tap again to hide the speed.

Swipe the screen with two fingers to start drawing a new figure. Tap and hold at any time to save a screenshot to your camera roll.

*

I am sitting in a room with Jules Antoine Lissajous. It’s 1855 in his Paris workshop and he is showing me his “beautiful machine.” Devised to draw a picture of two systems superimposed, it is constructed of a pair of tuning forks placed facing at right angles, each with a mirror attached. The light source is focused through a lens, bouncing off the first onto the second and projecting to a large screen a few feet away. As the tuning forks are struck and tones are produced, simple vibrations begin to move the mirrors in a regular oscillating pattern. The projected image begins to form the strange and beautiful curves of a Lissajous Figure.

Easily mistaken for the infinity sign, a circle or any number of more complex pretzels and knots, the Lissajous Figure is a picture of compound harmonic motion named for French physicist and mathematician Jules Antoine Lissajous (1822–1880). The shape is drawn by plotting a two-variable parametric equation as it iterates itself over time — the resulting figure is the picture of two systems falling into and out of phase.

The simple harmonic motion which Lissajous was measuring is easily described by the motion of a clock’s swinging pendulum. As the pendulum swings its speed isn’t constant, but rather it accelerates and decelerates following a precisely predictable curve. If plotted over time, as the clock ticks the motion of its pendulum draws a sine wave — the so-called “pure wave” or zero-picture of a simple moving system. Ocean waves, sound waves, light waves, even average daily temperatures all produce this same oscillating sine wave pattern.

Compound harmonic motion, then, is simply the superimposition of two sine waves as they register, interfere and produce a series of overlapping waves. When juxtaposed at right angles, two sine waves recording simple harmonic motion produce the surprisingly complex figures that Jules Antoine Lissajous identified.

These two varying signals produce a perpetual infinity (figuratively and literally as it will actually construct itself in the shape of the infinity sign given the right initial values). The Lissajous Figure becomes a picture of timing and sequence, registration and resonance, sound and music.

Specific shapes are produced corresponding to the resonating harmonic intervals familiar from western music (major fifth, minor third, major sixth, etc.) Any figure may be transformed into any figure and an infinite number of in-betweens as the oscillating sine waves pass in and out of harmonic resonance.

Jules Antoine Lissajous created a way to see sound (using mirrors, light and vibrating tuning forks.) But the most radical possibility of his mathematics might be in the commitment it asks of its audience. The image that Lissajous produces forms slowly right in front of your eyes — imperceptibly changing, forming, adjusting and re-aligning over time.
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最新バージョン 1.0.2 の更新情報

Last updated on 2022年03月03日
旧バージョン
Jules is now available for Apple Watch! A simpler version of the iOS app provides endless Lissajous curves. For a reflective pause in a busy day, start up Jules and watch as two sine waves construct an endlessly changing figure. The digital crown adjusts the speed of Jules' drawing to match your inner clock.
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Version History
1.0.2
2022年03月03日
Jules is now available for Apple Watch! A simpler version of the iOS app provides endless Lissajous curves. For a reflective pause in a busy day, start up Jules and watch as two sine waves construct an endlessly changing figure. The digital crown adjusts the speed of Jules' drawing to match your inner clock.
1.0.1
2018年08月20日
This app has been updated by Apple to display the Apple Watch app icon.

Optimize for newer devices and update permissions request for taking screenshots.
1.0
2015年10月23日

Jules Antoine Lissajous 価格

今日:
¥700
最低価格:
¥700
最高価格:
¥800

Jules Antoine Lissajous FAQ

ここをクリック!地理的に制限されているアプリのダウンロード方法をご参考ください。
次のリストをチェックして、Jules Antoine Lissajousの最低システム要件をご確認ください。
iPhone
iOS 12.0以降が必要です。
iPad
iPadOS 12.0以降が必要です。
Apple Watch
watchOS 8.0以降が必要です。
iPod touch
iOS 12.0以降が必要です。
Jules Antoine Lissajousは次の言語がサポートされています。 英語

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