Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
db is a generic term basically meaning: Decibel. A unit for measuring the
relative strength of a signal. Usually expressed as the logarithmic ratio of the strength of a transmitted signal to the strength of the original signal. A decibel is one tenth of a "bel". the key is that it is a ratio... without a reference a ratio is essentially meaningless. that is why you often hear that station a is 10db louder than station b... saying that station a was 10db wouldn't mean anything. dbm has a built in reference. by definition: Decibels referred to 1 milliwatt. so the reference is 1 mw. do you can say that the power of a source is 0dbm meaning that it is 1mw, 10dbm is 10mw, 20dbm is 100mw, -10dbm is .1mw, -20db is .01mw, etc. i don't know an ip3, but maybe that will give you a start to know what you are looking for. "jason" wrote in message ups.com... Hello All I am beginner in RF I may ask about some silly question and please pardon me May I know what actually the unit of dbm and db is different from one another? If they are different how can we minus the gain in unit of db from a IP3 in unit of dbm? Kindly enlighthen Thank you all rgds and thanks Jason |