The Himalayan singing bowl is a nearly symmetric idiophone played by rotating a wooden stick called a puja around the outer rim of the bowl. The vibrations of the bowl are excited by a stick-slip mechanism, which produces a radial motion of the bowl with a deflection shape similar to the (2,0) mode. We present experimental evidence that the position of the puja coincides with the point of minimum displacement on the bowl, indicating that it imposes a node in the deflection shape that rotates around the bowl with the puja. However, in many cases the puja is forced off of the bowl and an audible chatter is produced as the puja repeatedly strikes the bowl several times per second. This indicates that the position of the puja is not a node, but rather merely a point of minimum deflection. Examination of high-speed electronic speckle pattern interferograms and time-resolve acoustic spectra provide insight into the mechanics of the singing bowl and the origin of the chatter.
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