Tuning fork | Sound Vibration, Pitch & Frequency | Britannica (original) (raw)
tuning fork, narrow, two-pronged steel bar that when tuned to a specific musical pitch retains its tuning almost indefinitely. It was apparently invented by George Frideric Handel’s trumpeter John Shore shortly before Shore’s death in 1752.
Because it produces a nearly pure tone (without overtones), it is useful in experimental study of the physics of sound. It has also been used in musical instruments—e.g., the dulcitone, or typophone, a set of graduated tuning forks struck by felt hammers by means of a keyboard mechanism.
This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.