Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about dB:
Cynthia
Furse University
of Utah
1)
Definition
Anything in dB = 10 * log10 (Anything in
linear)
Voltage in dB = 10 * log10 (Voltage in
Volts)
Power in dB = 10 * log10 (Power in
2) Relationship between Power
and Voltage (Is it 10 or 20 ?)
Since Power = V2 / R
Power
in dB = 10 * log10 (Power in
=10 * log10 (V2
/ R)
= 20
* log10 (Voltage / sqrt (R ) )
3) Other Flavors of
dB: dBW, dBm, dBμ
Power (dB or dBW) = 10 *
log10 (Power in
Power (dBm)
= 10 * log10 (Power in milli (m)-
Power (dBμm)
= 10 * log10 (Power in micro (μ)-
4) And dBd
(for antennas)
dBd is used to represent GAIN (a ratio) relative to a dipole antenna:
Power (in maximum direction)
of a dipole antenna = Pdip
Power (in maximum direction)
of some other antenna = Pant
Gain of that antenna
relative to a dipole = Pant / Pdip
Gain (dBd)
= 10 * log10 (Pant / Pdip)
5) Common dB factors
Linear Function dB
Function
1 0 dB
* 2 +
3 dB
/ 2 -
3 dB
* 10 + 10 dB
* 100 + 20 dB
/ 10 - 10 dB
/ 100 - 20 dB
Example:
1 Watt 0 dB
2 Watt 0 + 3 dB = 3 dB
20 Watt = 3 dB + 10 = 13 dB
6) dB
Algebra
PRX (linear) = PTX
(linear) * Gain (linear)
/ Loss (linear)
PRX (dB) = PTX
(dB) + Gain (dB) Loss (dB)
PRX (dBm) = PTX (dBm) +
Gain (dB) Loss (dB)
What ?!? Why is there only one dBm
on the right hand side of the equation?
Note that Gain and Loss factors are ratios, not powers. The flavor of dB is determined by the power
term, not the other ratios in the equation.