Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob,
To more directly answer your question... One way to look at it is, that it is power which does the deed. To be fair, however, you can't have power without the voltage and visa-versa. This is when we are talking about receivers not OP amps. When a receiver receives a signal, there is a voltage present and current flowing at its input. They both occur. They both have to. Together these represent some amount of power. The receiver's input stage needs some RF energy to tickle its input so it can amplify it for the next stage. It is this power which is the energy. Because both of these quantities are there, we can use either to talk about the sensitivity of said receiver. Although not "normal" we could just as easily use current as a metric for receiver sensitivity. Voltage is directly measurable so it is easy to use as a measure. It has been used over the centuries (not really) as a standard way of measuring what is happening in a circuit. Power, on the other hand, cannot be directly measured it has to be calculated. Power, we know, is Volts times Amps or E x I. There are other ways to figure out power which I won't go into here, but this is how we must be satisfied doing it. Why, you may ask then, do we use these power numbers instead of just voltage AND to make matters worse, why do we express them in some obscure thing like dBm? Good question! So we Engineers can keep you Hams in a steady state of confusion and therefore keep us in high esteem and power... Not really, but I'll stop here to see if this helped any. 73, Steve, K9DCi You can't have "Robert11" wrote in message ... Hi Roy, Thanks for reply re my older post on db question. Very clear explanations by all. Will put this as a new thread, though. New at this, and relize I'm not thinking about this the correct way, probably. Relative to a receiving antenna's signal: what does the receiver actually respond to; power or voltage at its input ? Bob -------------------------------------------------------------- If the attenuation is given as, e.g., 2 db, what Percentage therefore of a received signal is "lost" going thru the coax length ? 100 * (1 - 10^(-dB/10)) ~ 37% is the fraction of power lost. 100 * (1 - 10^(-dB/20)) ~ 21% is the fraction of voltage lost. These assume that the coax is terminated with its characteristic impedance. And you don't need to put "lost" in quotation marks. It is truly lost as a signal, having been turned into heat. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Question Pool vs Book Larnin' | Policy | |||
stuff for all hams | General | |||
N3CVJ talking about children again.. | CB | |||
Question for the No coders : post from Kim | Policy | |||
Question for Roy Lewallen | Antenna |