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Old October 5th 06, 05:39 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
K7ITM K7ITM is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 644
Default PSD on a spectrum analyzer.

A spectrum analyzer has filters with particular bandwidths. What you
see displayed is the power passed by the filter. If you have the
analyzer set for a 5kHz resolution bandwidth, what you see, then, is
the power in (nominally) 5kHz of spectrum. To make things accurate,
you need to understand the shape of the filter, as well. In addition,
you can't necessarily use that number to find power spectral density in
other than a gross sense unless you know that the power is distributed
more or less evenly across that piece of spectrum. That is, if you use
5kHz resolution bandwidth and the signal has 99% of its power in a 1Hz
segment within that 5kHz, the signal's actual power spectral density
(at its center frequency) is much higher than the indicated power per
5kHz.

Many modern spectrum analyzers will display power spectral density
directly for you, taking into account the filter shapes and such.
Also, beware that resolution bandwidth and video bandwidth (on
analyzers that have both) are not the same thing.

Cheers,
Tom

wrote:
Hello,
I think what we read on a spectrum analyzer is dBm for the specified
range.

dBm/MHz is the PSD.

Lets say if the signal bandwidth is occupying 500Mhz (UWB) and has a
PSD of -30dBm, then what is my power in the entire channel?

(-30dBm)*500 = (1microW)*500 = 500 microWatts = -3dBm

So do I see the -3dBm signal level on the spectrum analyzer in the
whole bandwidth?

Please correct me if I am wrong.


Thanks.