Neutral sixth
| Inverse | neutral third | 
|---|---|
| Name | |
| Other names | - | 
| Abbreviation | n6 | 
| Size | |
| Semitones | ~8½ | 
| Interval class | ~3½ | 
| Just interval | 18:11 or 13:8 | 
| Cents | |
| 12-Tone equal temperament | N/A | 
| 24-Tone equal temperament | 850 | 
| Just intonation | 853 or 841 | 
A neutral sixth is a musical interval wider than a minor sixth ⓘ but narrower than a major sixth ⓘ. Three distinct intervals may be termed neutral sixths:
- The undecimal neutral sixth has a ratio of 18:11 between the frequencies of the two tones, or about 852.59 cents. ⓘ
- A tridecimal neutral sixth has a ratio of 13:8 between the frequencies of the two tones, or about 840.53 cents. This is the smallest neutral sixth, and occurs infrequently in music, as little music utilizes the 13th harmonic. ⓘ
- An equal-tempered neutral sixth is 850 cents, a hair narrower than the 18:11 ratio. It is an equal-tempered quarter tone exactly halfway between the equal-tempered minor and major sixths, and half of an equal-tempered perfect eleventh (octave plus fourth). ⓘ
These intervals are all within about 12 cents of each other and are difficult for most people to distinguish. Neutral sixths are roughly a quarter tone sharp from 12 equal temperament (12-ET) minor sixths and a quarter tone flat from 12-ET major sixths. In just intonation, as well as in tunings such as 31-ET, 41-ET, or 72-ET, which more closely approximate just intonation, the intervals are closer together.
A neutral sixth can be formed by subtracting a neutral second from a minor seventh. Based on its positioning in the harmonic series, the undecimal neutral sixth implies a root one minor seventh above the higher of the two notes.