Hahn Distance
In graph theory, the distance between two vertices a and b is defined as the minimum number of edges in a path connecting them, or in other words the minimum length of a connecting path. Given a set of just intervals, or more usually, of classes of octave-equivalent intervals, we can define a corresponding graph whose vertices are the intervals and which contain an edge between two intervals if the ratio between them is a consonance. Normally the unison is not counted as a consonance, and we therefore obtain in this way a graph with no loops which is very useful in various ways, such as in the study of scales.
If we apply the above construction to the set of p-limit interval classes, using as consonances the q-odd-limit consonances, where q is an odd number q >= p which less than the next prime after p, the resulting graph could be called the Hahn graph, and distance on it is q-limit Hahn distance between two octave classes.
Up to the 7-limit, Hahn distance has a very nice formula give by
||3^a 5^b 7^c||_hahn = max(|a|, |b|, |c|, |a+b|, |b+c|, |c+a|, |a+b+c|)
We may take this formula (or the similar formulas we would obtain for higher odd limits) and apply it to any triple of real numbers
||(a, b, c)||_hahn = max(|a|, |b|, |c|, |a+b|, |b+c|, |c+a|, |a+b+c|)
If we do that, Hahn distance becomes a norm defining a normed vector space, which we might call Hahn space, and 5 or 7 limit classes of intervals become a lattice. While Hahn space is not Euclidean, the distance measure it gives is not too different from the symmetrical Euclidean distance given by
||(a, b, c)||_euclid = sqrt(a^2 + b^2 + c^2 + ab + bc + ca)
and discussed here. We can regard Hahn distance as an alternative to Euclidean distance which is more closely tied to the consonance graph of the lattice.