Three historically independent traditions prescribe ordered vowel sequences performed as sustained vocal gestures on controlled exhalation, each traversing the cardinal vowel triangle of the human vocal tract: the seven-vowel sequence ΑΕΗΙΟΥΩ (/a ɛ e i o u ɔ/) of the Greco-Egyptian Papyri Graecae Magicae (PGM, 2nd–4th c. CE), the five-vowel kototama Futonorito sequence A–I–E–O–U (/a i e o u/) of the Japanese Shinto tradition, and the Vedic syllable AUM (/ɑ u m/). To the author’s knowledge, this paper presents the first comparative spectrographic analysis of these three sequences (performed by a single trained vocalist at a fundamental frequency of ~110 Hz and analysed with VoceVista Video). The results reveal a shared acoustic principle: each sequence, regardless of its particular vowel ordering, traverses the vowel space of the vocal tract, visiting the three corner vowel regions (/a/, /i/, /u/) that anchor human vowel perception across languages, performed on sustained phonation at a steady fundamental. This paper terms this principle the pneumatic sweep. The PGM seven-vowel sequence exists in cyclic rotation (as attested in the Miletus theatre inscription, 4th–5th c. CE), where each of seven archangels is invoked by the same sequence starting from a different vowel; the kototama tradition preserves three distinct vowel orderings (Sugaso, Kanagi, Futonorito). Despite different paths, all orderings activate the same resonant territory, visiting the three corner vowel regions (/a/, /i/, /u/) that define the vowel chart. AUM traverses this space in its vowel segment (/ɑ/ → /u/) and, as the paper reports, extends its formant trajectory during the sustained nasal murmur /m/, where F2 rises from ~600 Hz toward ~2200 Hz. This suggests that the phonetic notation “AUM” may underrepresent the acoustic content of the syllable as performed, and that the nasal closure may function as a latent continuation of the formant sweep. To the author’s knowledge, no prior study has mapped the A→U→M transition as a continuous F1×F2 trajectory or compared it within a unified vowel space across multiple sacred vowel traditions. The convergence suggests that the acoustic function of these practices is not a particular formant contour but the complete traversal of the formant space on sustained breath. Keywords: formant trajectory, pneumatic sweep, Papyri Graecae Magicae, kototama, AUM, vocal tract acoustics, spectral perception, comparative vocology, overtone singing, VoceVista
Ioannis Psallidakos (Mon,) studied this question.