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Main Authors: Cacace, Simone, Cristiani, Emiliano, Ignoto, Francesca L.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.16210
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author Cacace, Simone
Cristiani, Emiliano
Ignoto, Francesca L.
author_facet Cacace, Simone
Cristiani, Emiliano
Ignoto, Francesca L.
contents The wolf note is an acoustic instability that occurs in large bowed string instruments when a strong body resonance interacts with the vibrating string, producing amplitude modulation and loss of tonal control. Various wolf suppressors - tuned mass dampers attached to the string or to the instrument body - are used in practice to mitigate this effect. In this paper, we propose a mathematical model describing the coupled dynamics of a string and a two-dimensional body equipped with one or two wolf suppressors. Both string and body include elastic (second-order) and stiffness (fourth-order) contributions and can be excited either by plucking or bowing. Three performance indicators are introduced: The first one perceives the wolf-tone appearance, the second one quantifies the attenuation of the notes possibly caused by the wolf suppressor, and the third one measures the acoustic fidelity (in terms of spectrum) with respect to the original instrument. The proposed numerical tests give insights about optimal tuning and placement of one or two suppressors, achieving effective wolf-note suppression while preserving as much as possible the global tonal balance.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_16210
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Wolf and the Cello: Modelling and design of multiple resonance suppressors in large string instruments
Cacace, Simone
Cristiani, Emiliano
Ignoto, Francesca L.
Dynamical Systems
Numerical Analysis
Optimization and Control
The wolf note is an acoustic instability that occurs in large bowed string instruments when a strong body resonance interacts with the vibrating string, producing amplitude modulation and loss of tonal control. Various wolf suppressors - tuned mass dampers attached to the string or to the instrument body - are used in practice to mitigate this effect. In this paper, we propose a mathematical model describing the coupled dynamics of a string and a two-dimensional body equipped with one or two wolf suppressors. Both string and body include elastic (second-order) and stiffness (fourth-order) contributions and can be excited either by plucking or bowing. Three performance indicators are introduced: The first one perceives the wolf-tone appearance, the second one quantifies the attenuation of the notes possibly caused by the wolf suppressor, and the third one measures the acoustic fidelity (in terms of spectrum) with respect to the original instrument. The proposed numerical tests give insights about optimal tuning and placement of one or two suppressors, achieving effective wolf-note suppression while preserving as much as possible the global tonal balance.
title The Wolf and the Cello: Modelling and design of multiple resonance suppressors in large string instruments
topic Dynamical Systems
Numerical Analysis
Optimization and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.16210