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{{Short description|Logarithmic unit expressing the ratio of physical quantities}}
The '''decibel''' ('''dB''') is a measure of the ] between two quantities, and is used in a wide variety of measurements in ], ] and ]. While originally only used for ] and ] ratios, it has come to be used more generally in ]. The decibel is widely used as a measure of the loudness of ]. It is a "dimensionless unit" like ].
{{About|the logarithmic unit|use of this unit in ] measurements|Sound pressure level|other uses}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2014}}
{{Infobox unit
| name = decibel
| image =
| caption =
| standard = ]
| quantity =
| symbol = dB
| symbol2 =
| namedafter = ]
| units1 = bel
| inunits1 = {{sfrac|10}} bel
}}


The '''decibel''' (symbol: '''dB''') is a relative ] equal to one tenth of a '''bel''' ('''B'''). It expresses the ratio of two values of a ] on a ]. Two signals whose ] differ by one decibel have a power ratio of 10<sup>1/10</sup> (approximately {{val|1.26}}) or root-power ratio of 10<sup>1/20</sup> (approximately {{val|1.12}}).<ref name="auto">{{cite book |author-last=Mark |author-first=James E. |title=Physical Properties of Polymers Handbook |publisher=Springer |date=2007 |page=1025 |bibcode=2007ppph.book.....M |quote= the decibel represents a reduction in power of 1.258 times }}</ref><ref name="auto1">{{cite book |author-last=Yost |author-first=William |title=Fundamentals of Hearing: An Introduction |url=https://archive.org/details/fundamentalsofhe00yost |url-access=registration |publisher=Holt, Rinehart and Winston |edition=Second |date=1985 |page= |isbn=978-0-12-772690-8 |quote= a pressure ratio of 1.122 equals + 1.0 dB }}</ref>
==Definition==


The unit fundamentally expresses a relative change but may also be used to express an absolute value as the ratio of a value to a fixed reference value; when used in this way, the unit symbol is often suffixed with letter codes that indicate the reference value. For example, for the reference value of 1&nbsp;], a common suffix is "]" (e.g., "20&nbsp;dBV").<ref name="clqgmk"/><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160603203340/http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/pdf/sp811.pdf |date=2016-06-03 }}</ref>
An ] ''I'' or ] ''P'' can be expressed in decibels with the standard equation:


Two principal types of scaling of the decibel are in common use. When expressing a power ratio, it is defined as ten times the ].<ref>{{cite book |title=IEEE Standard 100: a dictionary of IEEE standards and terms |edition=7th |publisher=The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering |location=New York |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-7381-2601-2 |page=288}}</ref> That is, a change in ''power'' by a factor of 10 corresponds to a 10&nbsp;dB change in level. When expressing root-power quantities, a change in ] by a factor of 10 corresponds to a 20&nbsp;dB change in level. The decibel scales differ by a factor of two, so that the related power and root-power levels change by the same value in linear systems, where power is proportional to the square of amplitude.
::<math>I_\mathrm{dB} = 10 \log_{10} \left(\frac{I}{I_0} \right) \quad \mathrm{or} \quad P_\mathrm{dB} = 10 \log_{10} \left(\frac{P}{P_0} \right) </math>
:where ''I<sub>0</sub>'' and ''P<sub>0</sub>'' are a specified reference intensity and power.


The definition of the decibel originated in the measurement of transmission loss and power in ] of the early 20th century in the ] in the United States. The bel was named in honor of ], but the bel is seldom used. Instead, the decibel is used for a wide variety of measurements in science and ], most prominently for ] in ], in ] and ]. In electronics, the ]s of amplifiers, ] of signals, and ]s are often expressed in decibels.
For ], I<sub>0</sub> is typically chosen to be 10<sup>-12</sup>&nbsp;W/m<sup>2</sup>, which is roughly the ]. When this choice is made, the units are said to be "]". For sound power, P<sub>0</sub> is typically chosen to be 10<sup>-12</sup>&nbsp;W, and the units are then "]".


== History ==
When the ratio is between two ] strength or ] values (so that the power being transmitted is ] the ] of this value), the formula is:
The decibel originates from methods used to quantify signal loss in telegraph and telephone circuits. Until the mid-1920s, the unit for loss was ''miles of standard cable'' (MSC). 1&nbsp;MSC corresponded to the loss of power over one ] (approximately 1.6&nbsp;km) of standard telephone cable at a frequency of {{val|5000}}&nbsp;]s per second (795.8&nbsp;Hz), and matched closely the smallest attenuation detectable to a listener. A standard telephone cable was "a cable having uniformly distributed resistance of 88&nbsp;ohms per loop-mile and uniformly distributed ] ] of 0.054&nbsp;]s per mile" (approximately corresponding to 19&nbsp;] wire).<ref>{{cite book |last=Johnson |first=Kenneth Simonds |title=Transmission Circuits for Telephonic Communication: Methods of analysis and design |date=1944 |publisher=] |location=New York |page=10}}</ref>


In 1924, ] received a favorable response to a new unit definition among members of the International Advisory Committee on Long Distance Telephony in Europe and replaced the MSC with the ''Transmission Unit'' (TU). 1&nbsp;TU was defined such that the number of TUs was ten times the base-10 logarithm of the ratio of measured power to a reference power.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sound system engineering |edition=2nd |author-first1=Don |author-last1=Davis |author-first2=Carolyn |author-last2=Davis |publisher=] |date=1997 |isbn=978-0-240-80305-0 |page=35 |url={{Google books|plainurl=yes|id=9mAUp5IC5AMC|page=35}}}}</ref>
::<math>V_\mathrm{dB} = 20 \log_{10} \left (\frac{V_1}{V_0} \right ) = 10 \log_{10} \left (\frac{V_1^2}{V_0^2} \right )</math>
The definition was conveniently chosen such that 1&nbsp;TU approximated 1&nbsp;MSC; specifically, 1&nbsp;MSC was 1.056&nbsp;TU. In 1928, the Bell system renamed the TU into the decibel,<ref>{{cite journal |journal=Bell Laboratories Record |title='TU' becomes 'Decibel' |author-first=R. V. L. |author-last=Hartley |author-link=R. V. L. Hartley |volume=7 |issue=4 |publisher=AT&T |pages=137–139 |date=December 1928 |url={{Google books|plainurl=yes|id=h1ciAQAAIAAJ}}}}</ref> being one tenth of a newly defined unit for the base-10 logarithm of the power ratio. It was named the ''bel'', in honor of the telecommunications pioneer ].<ref>{{Cite journal |author-last=Martin |author-first=W. H. |date=January 1929 |title=DeciBel—The New Name for the Transmission Unit |journal=] |volume=8 |issue=1}}</ref>
The bel is seldom used, as the decibel was the proposed working unit.<ref>{{Google books |id=EaVSbjsaBfMC |page=276 |title=100 Years of Telephone Switching}}, Robert J. Chapuis, Amos E. Joel, 2003</ref>


The naming and early definition of the decibel is described in the ] Standard's Yearbook of 1931:<ref>{{Cite journal |title=Standards for Transmission of Speech |journal=Standards Yearbook |volume=119 |author-first=William H. |author-last=Harrison |date=1931 |publisher=National Bureau of Standards, U. S. Govt. Printing Office}}</ref>
It can therefore be seen that a ratio expressed in decibels is independent of whether the measurements are made as field strength or power values.


{{blockquote |
In ], decibels are ''always'' a measure of relative power or intensity regardless of whether it is calculated from a power or an amplitude measurement. This usage is not maintained in some fields of ], where the amplitude form may be used in cases where power is not strictly proportional to the amplitude squared.
Since the earliest days of the telephone, the need for a unit in which to measure the transmission efficiency of telephone facilities has been recognized. The introduction of cable in 1896 afforded a stable basis for a convenient unit and the "mile of standard" cable came into general use shortly thereafter. This unit was employed up to 1923 when a new unit was adopted as being more suitable for modern telephone work. The new transmission unit is widely used among the foreign telephone organizations and recently it was termed the "decibel" at the suggestion of the International Advisory Committee on Long Distance Telephony.


The decibel may be defined by the statement that two amounts of power differ by 1 decibel when they are in the ratio of 10<sup>0.1</sup> and any two amounts of power differ by ''N'' decibels when they are in the ratio of 10<sup>''N''(0.1)</sup>. The number of transmission units expressing the ratio of any two powers is therefore ten times the common logarithm of that ratio. This method of designating the gain or loss of power in telephone circuits permits direct addition or subtraction of the units expressing the efficiency of different parts of the circuit&nbsp;...}}
===Standards===


{{anchor|Logit}}In 1954, J. W. Horton argued that the use of the decibel as a unit for quantities other than transmission loss led to confusion, and suggested the name ''logit'' for "standard magnitudes which combine by multiplication", to contrast with the name ''unit'' for "standard magnitudes which combine by addition".<ref>{{cite journal |first=J. W. |last=Horton |title=The bewildering decibel |journal=Electrical Engineering |volume=73 |issue=6 |pages=550–555 |year=1954|doi=10.1109/EE.1954.6438830 |s2cid=51654766 }}
The decibel is not an ] unit, although the ] (BIPM) has recommended its inclusion in the SI system. Following the SI convention, the ''d'' is lowercase, as it is the SI prefix ''deci-'', and the ''B'' is capitalized, as it is an abbreviation of a name-derived unit, the ''bel'', named for ]. Written out it becomes ''decibel''. This is standard ] capitalization.
</ref>{{clarify|date=March 2018}}


In April&nbsp;2003, the ] (CIPM) considered a recommendation for the inclusion of the decibel in the ] (SI), but decided against the proposal.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/CC/CCU/CCU16.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006105908/http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/CC/CCU/CCU16.pdf |archive-date=2014-10-06 |url-status=live |publisher=Consultative Committee for Units |title=Meeting minutes |at=Section 3}}</ref> However, the decibel is recognized by other international bodies such as the ] (IEC) and ] (ISO).<ref name="IEC60027-3">{{cite web |url=http://webstore.iec.ch/webstore/webstore.nsf/artnum/028981 |title=Letter symbols to be used in electrical technology |at=Part 3: Logarithmic and related quantities, and their units |id=IEC&nbsp;60027-3, Ed.&nbsp;3.0 |publisher=International Electrotechnical Commission |date=19 July 2002}}</ref> The IEC permits the use of the decibel with root-power quantities as well as power and this recommendation is followed by many national standards bodies, such as ], which justifies the use of the decibel for voltage ratios.<ref name="NIST2008"/> In spite of their widespread use, ] (such as in ] or dBV) are not recognized by the IEC or ISO.
===Merits===


== Definition ==
The use of decibels has three different merits:
* It is more convenient to add the decibel values of, for instance, two consecutive ]s rather than to multiply their amplification factors.
* A very large range of ratios can be expressed with decibel values in a range of moderate size, allowing one to clearly visualize huge changes of some quantity.
* In acoustics, the decibel as a ] of ratios fits well to the logarithmic dependence of perceived ] on sound intensity. In other words, at all levels of loudness, increasing the decibel level by the same amount creates approximately the same increase in perceived loudness — humans perceive the increase from 20 dB to 25 dB as being about the same as the increase from 90 dB to 95 dB, for example. This is known as ].


{| class="wikitable floatright" style="width:0; font-size:85%; margin-left:1em"
== History of bels and decibels ==

A '''bel''' (symbol '''B''') is a ] of measure of ]s, such as ] levels and ] levels. It is mostly used in ], ], and ]. Invented by engineers of the ] to quantify the reduction in audio level over a 1 mile length of standard telephone cable, it was originally called the ''transmission unit'' or ''TU'', but was renamed in ] or ] in honor of the ]'s founder and telecommunications pioneer ].

The bel was too large for everyday use, so the '''decibel (dB)''', equal to 0.1 '''bel (B)''', became more commonly used. The bel is still used to represent noise power levels in ] specifications.

The ] is a similar unit which uses the ]. The ] uses numbers expressed in bels as well, though this is implied by definition rather than explicitly stated. In spectrometry and optics, the absorbance unit used to measure ] is equivalent to −1&nbsp;B. In astronomy, the ] measures the brightness of stars logarithmically, since just as the ear responds logarithmically to acoustic power, the eye responds logarithmically to brightness.

== Uses ==
=== Acoustics ===

The '''decibel''' unit is often used in acoustics to quantify ] levels relative to some 0 dB reference. The reference may be defined as a ] (SPL), commonly 20 micropascals (20 ]). To avoid confusion with other decibel measures, the term dB(SPL) is used for this. The reference sound pressure (corresponding to a sound pressure level of 0 dB) can also be defined as the sound pressure at the threshold of ] ], which is conventionally taken to be 2×10<sup>−5</sup> newtons per ], or 20 micropascals. That is roughly the sound of a ] flying 3 m away.

The reason for using the decibel is that the ] is capable of detecting a very large range of ]s. The ratio of the sound ''pressure'' that causes permanent damage from short exposure to the limit that (undamaged) ears can hear is above a ]. Because the ''power'' in a sound wave is proportional to the square of the pressure, the ratio of the maximum power to the minimum power is above one (]) ]. To deal with such a range, logarithmic units are useful: the log of a trillion is 12, so this ratio represents a difference of 120 dB.

]s have found that our perception of ] is roughly logarithmic — see the ]. In other words, you have to multiply the sound pressure by the same factor to have the same increase in loudness. This is why the numbers around the volume control dial on a typical ] are related not to the voltage amplification, but to its logarithm.

Various ] weightings are used to allow the result of an acoustical measurement to be expressed as a single sound level. The weightings approximate the changes in sensitivity of the ear to different frequencies at different levels. The two most commonly used weightings are the A and C weightings; other examples are the B and Z weightings.

Sound levels above 85 dB are considered harmful, while 120 dB is unsafe and 150 dB causes physical damage to the human ]. ]s break at about 163 dB. ]s cause A-weighted levels of about 133 dB at 33 m, or 100 dB at 170 m. ]s rupture at 190 dB to 198 dB. ]s and ]s cause levels of about 200 dB at 330 m. Sound levels of around 200 dB can cause ] to humans and are generated near ] ]s (e.g., 23 kg of ] detonated 3 m away). The ] generates levels of around 215 dB (or an A-weighted level of about 175 dB at a distance of 17 m). Even louder are ]s, ]s, ]es, ]s and ]es, all capable of exceeding 240 dB.

Some other values:

{| class="wikitable"
!dB(SPL)!!Source (with distance)
|- |-
! scope="col" style="text-align:right;" | dB
|250 ||Inside of ]
! scope="col" colspan="2" | Power ratio
! scope="col" colspan="2" | Amplitude ratio
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 100
|180 ||] engine at 30 m; ] humming at 1 m;<br> ] explosion at 100 miles (160 km)
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|10|000|000|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|100|000}} || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 90
|150 ||] ] at 30 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|1|000|000|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|31|623}} || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 80
|140 ||] being fired at 1 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|100|000|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|10|000}} || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 70
|130 ||Threshold of ]; ] horn at 10 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|10|000|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|3|162}} || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 60
|120 ||] ]; jet aircraft taking off at 100 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|1|000|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|1|000}} || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 50
|110 ||Accelerating ] at 5 m; chainsaw at 1 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|100|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 316 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .2
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 40
|100 ||] at 2 m; inside ]
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|10|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 100 || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 30
|90 ||Loud ], heavy ] at 1 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | {{gaps|1|000}} || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 31 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .62
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 20
|80 ||] at 1 m, curbside of busy street
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 100 || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 10 || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 10
|70 ||Busy ] at 5 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 10 || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 3 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .162
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 6
|60 ||] or restaurant inside
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 3 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .981 ≈ 4
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 1 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .995 ≈ 2
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 3
|50 ||Quiet ] inside
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 1 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .995 ≈ 2
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 1 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .413 ≈ {{sqrt|2}}
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 1
|40 ||Residential area at ]
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 1 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .259
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 1 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .122
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | 0
|30 ||Theatre, no talking
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 1 || style="border:none;" |
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 1 || style="border:none;" |
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −1
|10 ||Human breathing at 3 m
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .794
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .891
|- |-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −3
|0 ||Threshold of hearing (human with good ears)
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .501 ≈ {{sfrac|2}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .708 ≈ {{sqrt|{{sfrac|2}}}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −6
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .251 ≈ {{sfrac|4}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .501 ≈ {{sfrac|2}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −10
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .1
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.316|2}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −20
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .01
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .1
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −30
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .001
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.031|62}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −40
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|1}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .01
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −50
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|01}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.003|162}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −60
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|001}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | .001
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −70
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|000|1}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|316|2}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −80
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|000|01}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|1}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −90
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|000|001}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|031|62}}
|-
| style="text-align:right; border:none;" | −100
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|000|000|1}}
| style="text-align:right; border:none; padding-right:0" | 0 || style="border:none; padding-left:0;" | {{gaps|.000|01}}
|-
| colspan="5" style="text-align:left; background:#f8f8ff;" | An example scale showing power ratios ''x'', amplitude ratios {{sqrt|''x''}}, and dB equivalents 10&nbsp;log<sub>10</sub>&nbsp;''x''
|} |}


Note that the SPL emitted by an object changes with distance from the object. Commonly-quoted measurements of objects like ]s or ]s are meaningless without distance information. The measurement is not of the object's noise, but of the noise at a point in space near that object. For instance, it is intuitively obvious that the noise level of a ] will be much higher standing inside the crater than it would be measured from 5 kilometers away.


Measurements of ambient noise do not need a distance, since the noise level will be relatively constant at any point in the area (and are usually only rough approximations anyway).


The IEC Standard ] defines the following quantities. The decibel (dB) is one-tenth of a bel: {{nowrap|1=1 dB = 0.1 B}}. The bel (B) is {{1/2}}&nbsp;ln(10) ]s: {{nowrap|1=1 B = {{1/2}} ln(10) Np}}. The neper is the change in the ] of a ] when the root-power quantity changes by a factor of ], that is {{nowrap|1=1 Np = ln(e) = 1}}, thereby relating all of the units as nondimensional ] of root-power-quantity ratios, {{val|1|u=dB}} =&nbsp;{{val|0.11513|end=...|u=Np}} =&nbsp;{{val|0.11513|end=...}}. Finally, the level of a quantity is the logarithm of the ratio of the value of that quantity to a reference value of the same kind of quantity.
Measurements that refer to the "threshold of pain" or the threshold at which ear damage occurs are measuring the SPL at a point near the ear itself.


Therefore, the bel represents the logarithm of a ratio between two power quantities of 10:1, or the logarithm of a ratio between two root-power quantities of {{radic|10}}:1.<ref>{{cite book |title=International Standard CEI-IEC 27-3 |chapter=Letter symbols to be used in electrical technology |at=Part 3: Logarithmic quantities and units |publisher=International Electrotechnical Commission}}</ref>
Under controlled conditions, in an acoustical laboratory, the trained healthy human ear is able to discern changes in sound levels of 1 dB, when exposed to steady, single frequency ("pure tone") signals in the mid-frequency range. It is widely accepted that the average ]y ear, however, can barely perceive noise level changes of 3 dB.


Two signals whose levels differ by one decibel have a power ratio of 10<sup>1/10</sup>, which is approximately {{val|1.25893}}, and an amplitude (root-power quantity) ratio of 10<sup>1/20</sup> ({{val|1.12202}}).<ref name="auto"/><ref name="auto1"/>
On this scale, the normal range of human hearing extends from about 0 dB to about 140 dB. 0 dB is the ] of hearing in healthy, undamaged human ears; 0 dB is not an absence of sound, and it is possible for people with exceptionally good hearing to hear sounds at −10 dB. A 3 dB increase in the level of continuous noise doubles the sound power, however experimentation has determined that the frequency response of the human ear results in a perceived doubling of loudness with every 10 dB increase; a 5 dB increase is a readily noticeable change, while a 3 dB increase is barely noticeable to most people.


The bel is rarely used either without a prefix or with ] other than '']''; it is customary, for example, to use ''hundredths of a decibel'' rather than ''millibels''. Thus, five one-thousandths of a bel would normally be written 0.05&nbsp;dB, and not 5&nbsp;mB.<ref>Fedor Mitschke, ''Fiber Optics: Physics and Technology'', Springer, 2010 {{ISBN|3642037038}}.</ref>
Sound pressure levels are applicable to the specific position at which they are measured. The levels change with the distance from the source of the sound; in general, the level decreases as the distance from the source increases. If the distance from the source is unknown, it is difficult to estimate the sound pressure level at the source.


The method of expressing a ratio as a level in decibels depends on whether the measured property is a ''power quantity'' or a ''root-power quantity''; see '']'' for details.
==== Frequency weighting ====
{{main|Frequency weighting}}


=== Power quantities ===
Since the human ear is not equally sensitive to all the frequencies of sound within the entire spectrum, noise levels at maximum human sensitivity — middle A and its higher ]s (between 2,000 and 4,000 ]) — are factored more heavily into sound descriptions using a process called frequency weighting.
When referring to measurements of '']'' quantities, a ratio can be expressed as a ] in decibels by evaluating ten times the ] of the ratio of the measured quantity to reference value. Thus, the ratio of ''P'' (measured power) to ''P''<sub>0</sub> (reference power) is represented by ''L''<sub>''P''</sub>, that ratio expressed in decibels,<ref>{{Cite book |title=Microwave Engineering |author-first=David M. |author-last=Pozar |edition=3rd |publisher=Wiley |date=2005 |author-link=David M. Pozar |isbn=978-0-471-44878-5 |page=63}}</ref> which is calculated using the formula:<ref>IEC 60027-3:2002</ref>
: <math>
L_P = \frac{1}{2} \ln\!\left(\frac{P}{P_0}\right)\,\text{Np} = 10 \log_{10}\!\left(\frac{P}{P_0}\right)\,\text{dB}
</math>


The base-10 logarithm of the ratio of the two power quantities is the number of bels. The number of decibels is ten times the number of bels (equivalently, a decibel is one-tenth of a bel). ''P'' and ''P''<sub>0</sub> must measure the same type of quantity, and have the same units before calculating the ratio. If {{nowrap|1=''P'' = ''P''<sub>0</sub>}} in the above equation, then ''L''<sub>''P''</sub> = 0. If ''P'' is greater than ''P''<sub>0</sub> then ''L''<sub>''P''</sub> is positive; if ''P'' is less than ''P''<sub>0</sub> then ''L''<sub>''P''</sub> is negative.
The most widely used frequency weighting is the "]", which roughly corresponds to the inverse of the 40 dB (at 1 kHz) equal-loudness curve. Using this filter, the sound level ] is less sensitive to very high and very low frequencies. The A weighting parallels the sensitivity of the human ear when it is exposed to normal levels, and frequency weighting C is suitable for use when the ear is exposed to higher sound levels. Other defined frequency weightings, such as B and Z, are rarely used.


Rearranging the above equation gives the following formula for ''P'' in terms of ''P''<sub>0</sub> and ''L''<sub>''P''</sub> :
Frequency weighted sound levels are still expressed in decibels (with unit symbol dB), although it is common to see the incorrect unit symbols dBA or dB(A) used for A-weighted sound levels.
: <math>
P = 10^\frac{L_P}{10\,\text{dB}} P_0
</math>


=== Electronics === === Root-power (field) quantities ===
{{main|Power, root-power, and field quantities}}
When referring to measurements of root-power quantities, it is usual to consider the ratio of the squares of ''F'' (measured) and ''F''<sub>0</sub> (reference). This is because the definitions were originally formulated to give the same value for relative ratios for both power and root-power quantities. Thus, the following definition is used:
: <math>
L_F = \ln\!\left(\frac{F}{F_0}\right)\,\text{Np} = 10 \log_{10}\!\left(\frac{F^2}{F_0^2}\right)\,\text{dB} = 20 \log_{10} \left(\frac{F}{F_0}\right)\,\text{dB}
</math>


The formula may be rearranged to give
The decibel is used rather than ] ratios or ]ages because when certain types of ], such as amplifiers and ]s, are connected in series, expressions of power level in decibels may be arithmetically added and subtracted. It is also common in disciplines such as audio, in which the properties of the signal are best expressed in logarithms due to the response of the ear.
: <math>
F = 10^\frac{L_F}{20\,\text{dB}} F_0
</math>


Similarly, in ], dissipated power is typically proportional to the square of ] or ] when the ] is constant. Taking voltage as an example, this leads to the equation for power gain level ''L''<sub>''G''</sub>:
In ] electronics, the decibel is used to describe the ratio between two measurements of ]. It can also be combined with a suffix to create an absolute unit of electrical power. For example, it can be combined with "m" for "milliwatt" to produce the "dBm". Zero dBm is one milliwatt, and 1 dBm is one decibel greater than 0 dBm, or about 1.259 mW.
: <math>
L_G = 20 \log_{10}\!\left (\frac{V_\text{out}}{V_\text{in}}\right)\,\text{dB}
</math>
where ''V''<sub>out</sub> is the ] (rms) output voltage, ''V''<sub>in</sub> is the rms input voltage. A similar formula holds for current.


The term ''root-power quantity'' is introduced by ISO Standard ] as a substitute of ''field quantity''. The term ''field quantity'' is deprecated by that standard and ''root-power'' is used throughout this article.
Although decibels were originally used for power ratios, they are commonly used in electronics to describe voltage or current ratios. In a constant resistive load, power is proportional to the square of the voltage or current in the circuit. Therefore, the decibel ratio of two voltages ''V''<sub>1</sub> and ''V''<sub>2</sub> is defined as 20 log<sub>10</sub>(''V''<sub>1</sub>/''V''<sub>2</sub>), and similarly for current ratios. Thus, for example, a factor of 2.0 in voltage is equivalent to 6.02 dB (not 3.01 dB!).


=== Relationship between power and root-power levels ===
This practice is fully consistent with power-based decibels, provided the circuit ] remains constant. However, voltage-based decibels are frequently used to express such quantities as the voltage gain of an amplifier, where the two voltages are measured in different circuits which may have very different resistances. For example, a unity-gain ] with a high ] and a low ] may be said to have a "voltage gain of 0 dB", even though it is actually providing a considerable power gain when driving a low-resistance load.
Although power and root-power quantities are different quantities, their respective levels are historically measured in the same units, typically decibels. A factor of 2 is introduced to make ''changes'' in the respective levels match under restricted conditions such as when the medium is linear and the ''same'' waveform is under consideration with changes in amplitude, or the medium impedance is linear and independent of both frequency and time. This relies on the relationship
:<math> \frac{P(t)}{P_0} = \left(\frac{F(t)}{F_0}\right)^2 </math>
holding.<ref>{{citation |author=I M Mills |author2=B N Taylor |author3=A J Thor |title=Definitions of the units radian, neper, bel and decibel |year=2001 |journal=Metrologia |volume=38 |page=353 |number=4 |doi=10.1088/0026-1394/38/4/8|bibcode=2001Metro..38..353M |s2cid=250827251 }}</ref> In a nonlinear system, this relationship does not hold by the definition of linearity. However, even in a ] in which the power quantity is the product of two linearly related quantities (e.g. ] and ]), if the ] is frequency- or time-dependent, this relationship does not hold in general, for example if the energy spectrum of the waveform changes.


For differences in level, the required relationship is relaxed from that above to one of proportionality (i.e., the reference quantities ''P''{{sub|0}} and ''F''{{sub|0}} need not be related), or equivalently,
In professional audio, a popular unit is the dBu (see below for all the units). The "u" stands for "unloaded", and was probably chosen to be similar to lowercase "v", as dBv was the older name for the same thing. It was changed to avoid confusion with dBV. This unit (dBu) is an ] measurement of voltage which uses as its reference 0.775 V<sub>RMS</sub>. Chosen for historical reasons, it is the voltage level at which you get 1 mW of power in a 600 ohm resistor, which used to be the standard impedance in almost all professional audio circuits. <!--what's a "professional audio circuit"?--> <!-- a circuit that uses 600 ohms for everything. :-) they mean stuff for professional audio like recording and live sound. microphones, mixers, etc. i think. -->
: <math> \frac{P_2}{P_1} = \left(\frac{F_2}{F_1}\right)^2 </math>
must hold to allow the power level difference to be equal to the root-power level difference from power ''P''{{sub|1}} and ''F''{{sub|1}} to ''P''{{sub|2}} and ''F''{{sub|2}}. An example might be an amplifier with unity voltage gain independent of load and frequency driving a load with a frequency-dependent impedance: the relative voltage gain of the amplifier is always 0&nbsp;dB, but the power gain depends on the changing spectral composition of the waveform being amplified. Frequency-dependent impedances may be analyzed by considering the quantities ] and the associated root-power quantities via the ], which allows elimination of the frequency dependence in the analysis by analyzing the system at each frequency independently.


=== Conversions ===
Since there may be many different bases for a measurement expressed in decibels, a dB value is meaningless unless the reference value (equivalent to 0 dB) is clearly stated. For example, the ] of an ] system can only be given with respect to a reference antenna (generally a perfect ]); if the reference is not stated, the dB gain value is not usable.
Since logarithm differences measured in these units often represent power ratios and root-power ratios, values for both are shown below. The bel is traditionally used as a unit of logarithmic power ratio, while the neper is used for logarithmic root-power (amplitude) ratio.


{| class="wikitable"
=== Optics ===
|+ Conversion between units of level and a list of corresponding ratios
!Unit !! In decibels !! In bels !! In ]s !! Power ratio !! Root-power ratio
|-
| 1&nbsp;dB || 1&nbsp;dB || 0.1 B || {{val|0.11513}}&nbsp;Np || 10<sup>1/10</sup> ≈ {{val|1.25893}} || 10<sup>1/20</sup> ≈ {{val|1.12202}}
|-
| 1 Np || {{val|8.68589}}&nbsp;dB || {{val|0.868589}}&nbsp;B || 1 Np || e<sup>2</sup> ≈ {{val|7.38906}} || ] ≈ {{val|2.71828}}
|-
| 1 B || 10&nbsp;dB || 1 B || 1.151&nbsp;3 Np || 10 || 10<sup>1/2</sup> ≈ 3.162&nbsp;28
|}


=== Examples ===
In an ], if a known amount of ] power, in ] (referenced to 1 mW), is launched into a ], and the losses, in dB (decibels), of each ] (e.g., connectors, splices, and lengths of fibre) are known, the overall link ] may be quickly calculated by simple addition and subtraction of decibel quantities.
The unit dBW is often used to denote a ratio for which the reference is 1&nbsp;W, and similarly dBm for a {{nowrap|1 mW}} reference point.
* Calculating the ratio in decibels of {{nowrap|1 kW}} (one kilowatt, or {{val|1000}} watts) to {{nowrap|1 W}} yields: <math display="block">
L_G = 10 \log_{10} \left(\frac{1\,000\,\text{W}}{1\,\text{W}}\right)\,\text{dB} = 30\,\text{dB}
</math>
* The ratio in decibels of {{nowrap|1={{radic|1000}} V ≈ 31.62 V}} to {{nowrap|1 V}} is: <math display="block">
L_G = 20 \log_{10} \left(\frac{31.62\,\text{V}}{1\,\text{V}}\right)\,\text{dB} = 30\,\text{dB}
</math>
{{nowrap|1=(31.62 V / 1 V)<sup>2</sup> ≈ 1 kW / 1 W}}, illustrating the consequence from the definitions above that ''L''<sub>''G''</sub> has the same value, 30&nbsp;dB, regardless of whether it is obtained from powers or from amplitudes, provided that in the specific system being considered power ratios are equal to amplitude ratios squared.
* The ratio in decibels of {{nowrap|10 W}} to {{nowrap|1 mW}} (one milliwatt) is obtained with the formula: <math display="block">
L_G = 10 \log_{10} \left(\frac{10\text{W}}{0.001\text{W}}\right)\,\text{dB} = 40\,\text{dB}
</math>
* The power ratio corresponding to a {{nowrap|3 dB}} change in level is given by: <math display="block">
G = 10^\frac{3}{10} \times 1 = 1.995\,26\ldots \approx 2
</math>


A change in power ratio by a factor of 10 corresponds to a change in level of {{nowrap|10 dB}}. A change in power ratio by a factor of 2 or {{sfrac|2}} is approximately a ]. More precisely, the change is ±{{val|3.0103}}&nbsp;dB, but this is almost universally rounded to 3&nbsp;dB in technical writing. This implies an increase in voltage by a factor of {{nowrap|{{sqrt|2}} ≈}} {{val|1.4142}}. Likewise, a doubling or halving of the voltage, corresponding to a quadrupling or quartering of the power, is commonly described as 6&nbsp;dB rather than ±{{val|6.0206}}&nbsp;dB.
=== Telecommunications ===


Should it be necessary to make the distinction, the number of decibels is written with additional ]. 3.000&nbsp;dB corresponds to a power ratio of 10<sup>3/10</sup>, or {{val|1.9953}}, about 0.24% different from exactly 2, and a voltage ratio of {{val|1.4125}}, 0.12% different from exactly {{sqrt|2}}. Similarly, an increase of 6.000&nbsp;dB corresponds to the power ratio is {{nowrap|10<sup>6/10</sup> ≈}} {{val|3.9811}}, about 0.5% different from 4.
In telecommunications, decibels are commonly used to measure ]s and other ratio measurements.


== Properties ==
Decibels are used to account for the gains and losses of a signal from a transmitter to a receiver through some medium (free space, wave guides, coax, fiber optics, etc.) using a ].
The decibel is useful for representing large ratios and for simplifying representation of multiplicative effects, such as attenuation from multiple sources along a signal chain. Its application in systems with additive effects is less intuitive, such as in the combined sound pressure level of two machines operating together. Care is also necessary with decibels directly in fractions and with the units of multiplicative operations.


=== Seismology === === Reporting large ratios ===
The ] nature of the decibel means that a very large range of ratios can be represented by a convenient number, in a manner similar to ]. This allows one to clearly visualize huge changes of some quantity. See '']'' and '']''. For example, 120&nbsp;dB SPL may be clearer than "a trillion times more intense than the threshold of hearing".{{citation needed|date=February 2021}}


=== Representation of multiplication operations ===
Earthquakes were formerly measured on the ], which is expressed in bels. (The units in this case are always assumed, rather than explicit.) The more modern ] is designed to produce values comparable to those of the Richter scale.<!--but perhaps is unitless, since it is not based on a base 10 log of an amplitude-->
Level values in decibels can be added instead of multiplying the underlying power values, which means that the overall gain of a multi-component system, such as a series of ] stages, can be calculated by summing the gains in decibels of the individual components, rather than multiply the amplification factors; that is, {{nowrap|log(''A'' × ''B'' × ''C'') }}= log(''A'') + log(''B'') + log(''C''). Practically, this means that, armed only with the knowledge that 1&nbsp;dB is a power gain of approximately 26%, 3&nbsp;dB is approximately 2× power gain, and 10&nbsp;dB is 10× power gain, it is possible to determine the power ratio of a system from the gain in dB with only simple addition and multiplication. For example:
*A system consists of 3 amplifiers in series, with gains (ratio of power out to in) of 10&nbsp;dB, 8&nbsp;dB, and 7&nbsp;dB respectively, for a total gain of 25&nbsp;dB. Broken into combinations of 10, 3, and 1&nbsp;dB, this is: {{block indent | em = 1.5 | text =
25&nbsp;dB = 10&nbsp;dB + 10&nbsp;dB + 3&nbsp;dB + 1&nbsp;dB + 1&nbsp;dB
}} With an input of 1 watt, the output is approximately {{block indent | em = 1.5 | text =
1&nbsp;W × 10 × 10 × 2 × 1.26 × 1.26 ≈ 317.5&nbsp;W
}} Calculated precisely, the output is 1&nbsp;W × 10<sup>25/10</sup> ≈ 316.2&nbsp;W. The approximate value has an error of only +0.4% with respect to the actual value, which is negligible given the precision of the values supplied and the accuracy of most measurement instrumentation.


However, according to its critics, the decibel creates confusion, obscures reasoning, is more related to the era of ]s than to modern digital processing, and is cumbersome and difficult to interpret.<ref name="Hickling">R. Hickling (1999), Noise Control and SI Units, J Acoust Soc Am 106, 3048</ref><ref>Hickling, R. (2006). Decibels and octaves, who needs them?. Journal of sound and vibration, 291(3-5), 1202-1207.</ref>
== Typical abbreviations ==
Quantities in decibels are not necessarily ],<ref>Nicholas P. Cheremisinoff (1996) Noise Control in Industry: A Practical Guide, Elsevier, 203 pp, p. </ref><ref>Andrew Clennel Palmer (2008), Dimensional Analysis and Intelligent Experimentation, World Scientific, 154 pp, p.13</ref> thus being "of unacceptable form for use in ]".<ref>J. C. Gibbings, ''Dimensional Analysis'', , Springer, 2011 {{ISBN|1849963177}}.</ref>
Thus, units require special care in decibel operations. Take, for example, ] ''C''/''N''<sub>0</sub> (in hertz), involving carrier power ''C'' (in watts) and noise ] ''N''<sub>0</sub> (in W/Hz). Expressed in decibels, this ratio would be a subtraction (''C''/''N''<sub>0</sub>)<sub>dB</sub> = ''C''<sub>dB</sub> − ''N''<sub>0&nbsp;dB</sub>. However, the linear-scale units still simplify in the implied fraction, so that the results would be expressed in dB-Hz.


=== Representation of addition operations <span class="anchor" id="Addition"></span> ===
=== Absolute measurements ===
{{Further|Logarithmic addition}}
According to Mitschke,<ref>{{cite book |title=Fiber Optics |publisher=Springer |date=2010}}</ref> "The advantage of using a logarithmic measure is that in a transmission chain, there are many elements concatenated, and each has its own gain or attenuation. To obtain the total, addition of decibel values is much more convenient than multiplication of the individual factors." However, for the same reason that humans excel at additive operation over multiplication, decibels are awkward in inherently additive operations:<ref>R. J. Peters, ''Acoustics and Noise Control'', Routledge, 12 November 2013, 400 pages, p.&nbsp;13</ref><blockquote>if two machines each individually produce a ] level of, say, 90&nbsp;dB at a certain point, then when both are operating together we should expect the combined sound pressure level to increase to 93&nbsp;dB, but certainly not to 180&nbsp;dB!; suppose that the noise from a machine is measured (including the contribution of background noise) and found to be 87&nbsp;dBA but when the machine is switched off the background noise alone is measured as 83&nbsp;dBA. the machine noise may be obtained by 'subtracting' the 83&nbsp;dBA background noise from the combined level of 87&nbsp;dBA; i.e., 84.8&nbsp;dBA.; in order to find a representative value of the sound level in a room a number of measurements are taken at different positions within the room, and an average value is calculated. Compare the logarithmic and arithmetic averages of 70&nbsp;dB and 90&nbsp;dB: ] = 87&nbsp;dB; ] = 80&nbsp;dB.</blockquote>


Addition on a logarithmic scale is called ], and can be defined by taking exponentials to convert to a linear scale, adding there, and then taking logarithms to return. For example, where operations on decibels are logarithmic addition/subtraction and logarithmic multiplication/division, while operations on the linear scale are the usual operations:
==== Electric power ====
:<math>87\,\text{dBA} \ominus 83\,\text{dBA} = 10 \cdot \log_{10}\bigl(10^{87/10} - 10^{83/10}\bigr)\,\text{dBA} \approx 84.8\,\text{dBA}</math>
:<math>
\begin{align}
M_\text{lm}(70, 90) &= \left(70\,\text{dBA} + 90\,\text{dBA}\right)/2 \\
&= 10 \cdot \log_{10}\left(\bigl(10^{70/10} + 10^{90/10}\bigr)/2\right)\,\text{dBA} \\
&= 10 \cdot \left(\log_{10}\bigl(10^{70/10} + 10^{90/10}\bigr) - \log_{10} 2\right)\,\text{dBA}
\approx 87\,\text{dBA}
\end{align}
</math>
The ] is obtained from the logarithmic sum by subtracting <math>10\log_{10} 2</math>, since logarithmic division is linear subtraction.


=== Fractions ===
; ] ''or'' dBmW : dB(1 mW@600 &Omega;) — in ] audio, power measurement relative to 1 milliwatt into a 600 ] ]
] constants, in topics such as ] communication and ] ], are often expressed as a ] or ratio to distance of transmission. In this case, dB/m represents decibel per meter, dB/mi represents decibel per mile, for example. These quantities are to be manipulated obeying the rules of ], e.g., a 100-meter run with a 3.5&nbsp;dB/km fiber yields a loss of 0.35&nbsp;dB = 3.5&nbsp;dB/km × 0.1&nbsp;km.
; ] : dB(1 W@600 &Omega;) — same as dBm, with reference level of 1 ].


==== Electric voltage ==== == Uses ==


=== Perception ===
; dBu ''or'' dBv : dB(0.775 V) — (usually ]) ]age ] referenced to 0.775 volts, not related to any impedance. dBu is preferable, since dBv is easily confused with dBV. The "u" comes from "unloaded".
The human perception of the intensity of sound and light more nearly approximates the logarithm of intensity rather than a linear relationship (see ]), making the dB scale a useful measure.<ref>{{Google books |id=1SMXAAAAQBAJ |page=268 |title=Sensation and Perception}}</ref><ref>{{Google books |id=BggrpTek5kAC |page=SA19-PA9 |title=Introduction to Understandable Physics, Volume 2}}</ref><ref>{{Google books |id=ukvei0wge_8C |page=356 |title=Visual Perception: Physiology, Psychology, and Ecology}}</ref><ref>{{Google books |id=-QIfF9q6Q_EC |page=407 |title=Exercise Psychology}}</ref><ref>{{Google books |id=oUNfSjS11ggC |page=83 |title=Foundations of Perception}}</ref><ref>{{Google books |id=w888Mw1dh_EC |page=304 |title=Fitting The Task To The Human}}</ref>
; dBV : dB(1 V) — (usually RMS) voltage amplitude of a signal in a ], relative to 1 volt, not related to any impedance.


==== Acoustics ==== === Acoustics ===
The decibel is commonly used in ] as a unit of ] or ]. The reference pressure for sound in air is set at the typical threshold of perception of an average human and there are ]. As sound pressure is a root-power quantity, the appropriate version of the unit definition is used:
: <math>
L_p = 20 \log_{10}\!\left(\frac{p_{\text{rms}}}{p_{\text{ref}}}\right)\,\text{dB},
</math>
where ''p''<sub>rms</sub> is the ] of the measured sound pressure and ''p''<sub>ref</sub> is the standard reference sound pressure of 20 ]s in air or 1 micropascal in water.<ref>ISO 1683:2015</ref>


Use of the decibel in underwater acoustics leads to confusion, in part because of this difference in reference value.<ref>Chapman, D. M., & Ellis, D. D. (1998). Elusive decibel: Thoughts on sonars and marine mammals. Canadian Acoustics, 26(2), 29-31.</ref><ref>C. S. Clay (1999), Underwater sound transmission and SI units, J Acoust Soc Am 106, 3047</ref>
; dB(SPL) : dB(Sound Pressure Level) — relative to 20 micropascals (&mu;Pa) = 2×10<sup>−5</sup> Pa, the quietest sound a human can hear. This is roughly the sound of a mosquito flying 3 metres away. This is often abbreviated to just "dB", which gives some the erroneous notion that a dB is an absolute unit by itself.


] is proportional to the square of sound pressure. Therefore, the sound intensity level can also be defined as:
==== Radio power ====
: <math>
L_p = 10 \log_{10}\!\left(\frac{I}{I_{\text{ref}}}\right)\,\text{dB},
</math>


The human ear has a large ] in sound reception. The ratio of the sound intensity that causes permanent damage during short exposure to that of the quietest sound that the ear can hear is equal to or greater than 1 trillion (10<sup>12</sup>).<ref>{{cite web |title=Loud Noise Can Cause Hearing Loss |url=https://www.cdc.gov/nceh/hearing_loss/what_noises_cause_hearing_loss.html |website=cdc.gov |date=7 October 2019 |publisher=Centers for Disease Control and Prevention |access-date=30 July 2020}}</ref> Such large measurement ranges are conveniently expressed in ]: the base-10 logarithm of 10<sup>12</sup> is 12, which is expressed as a sound intensity level of 120&nbsp;dB re 1 pW/m<sup>2</sup>. The reference values of I and p in air have been chosen such that this corresponds approximately to a sound pressure level of 120&nbsp;dB re 20&nbsp;].
; dBm : dB(mW) — power relative to 1 ].
; dB&mu; ''or'' dBu : dB(&mu;V/m) — ] relative to 1 ] per ].
; dBf : dB(fW) — power relative to 1 ].
; dBW : dB(W) — power relative to 1 ].
; dBk : dB(kW) — power relative to 1 ].


Since the human ear is not equally sensitive to all sound frequencies, the acoustic power spectrum is modified by ] (] being the most common standard) to get the weighted acoustic power before converting to a sound level or noise level in decibels.<ref name=Pierre>{{citation |url= http://storeycountywindfarms.org/ref3_Impact_Sound_Pressure.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151222153918/http://storeycountywindfarms.org/ref3_Impact_Sound_Pressure.pdf |archive-date=2015-12-22 |url-status=live |author=Richard L. St. Pierre, Jr. and Daniel J. Maguire |title=The Impact of A-weighting Sound Pressure Level Measurements during the Evaluation of Noise Exposure |date=July 2004 |access-date=2011-09-13}}</ref>
=== Relative measurements ===


{{further|Sound pressure#Examples of sound pressure}}
; ] weighting : These symbols are often used to denote the use of different ]s, used to approximate the human ear's ] to sound, although the measurement is still in dB (SPL). Other variations that may be seen are dB<sub>A</sub> or dBA. According to ANSI standards, the preferred usage is to write L<sub>A</sub> = x dB, as dBA implies a reference to an "A" unit, not an A-weighting. They are still used commonly as a shorthand for A-weighted measurements, however.
; dBd : dB(dipole) — the forward gain of an ] compared to a half-wave ] antenna.
; dBi : dB(isotropic) — the forward gain of an antenna compared to an idealized ] antenna.
; ] ''or'' dBfs : dB(]) — the ] of a signal (usually audio) compared to the maximum which a device can handle before ] occurs. In digital systems, 0 dBFS would equal the highest level (number) the processor is capable of representing. (Measured values are negative, since they are less than the maximum.)
; dBr : dB(relative) — simply a relative difference to something else, which is made apparent in context. The difference of a filter's response to nominal levels, for instance.
; ] : dB above ].


== Reckoning == === Telephony ===
The decibel is used in ] and ]. Similarly to the use in acoustics, a frequency weighted power is often used. For audio noise measurements in electrical circuits, the weightings are called ]s.<ref name="Reeve">{{Cite book |last=Reeve |first= William D. |year= 1992 |title= Subscriber Loop Signaling and Transmission Handbook – Analog |edition= 1st |publisher=IEEE Press |isbn= 0-87942-274-2}}</ref>


=== Electronics ===
Decibels are handy for mental calculation, because adding them is easier than multiplying ratios.
In electronics, the decibel is often used to express power or amplitude ratios (as for ]) in preference to ] ratios or ]ages. One advantage is that the total decibel gain of a series of components (such as ]s and ]) can be calculated simply by summing the decibel gains of the individual components. Similarly, in telecommunications, decibels denote signal gain or loss from a transmitter to a receiver through some medium (], ], ], ], etc.) using a ].
First, however, one has to be able to convert easily between ratios and decibels.
The most obvious way is to memorize the logs of small primes, but there are a few other tricks that can help.


The decibel unit can also be combined with a reference level, often indicated via a suffix, to create an absolute unit of electric power. For example, it can be combined with "m" for "milliwatt" to produce the "]". A power level of 0 dBm corresponds to one milliwatt, and 1 dBm is one decibel greater (about 1.259&nbsp;mW).
=== Round numbers ===


In professional audio specifications, a popular unit is the ]. This is relative to the ] voltage which delivers 1&nbsp;mW (0&nbsp;dBm) into a 600-ohm resistor, or {{sqrt|1&nbsp;mW &times; 600&nbsp;Ω }}≈ 0.775&nbsp;V<sub>RMS</sub>. When used in a 600-ohm circuit (historically, the standard reference impedance in telephone circuits), dBu and dBm are ].
The values of coins and banknotes are round numbers. The rules are:
#One is a round number
#Twice a round number is a round number: 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64
#Ten times a round number is a round number: 10, 100
#Half a round number is a round number: 50, 25, 12.5, 6.25
#The tenth of a round number is a round number: 5, 2.5, 1.25, 1.6, 3.2, 6.4


=== Optics ===
Now 6.25 and 6.4 are approximately equal to 6.3, so we don't care. Thus the round numbers between 1 and 10 are these:
In an ], if a known amount of ] power, in ] (referenced to 1&nbsp;mW), is launched into a ], and the losses, in dB (decibels), of each component (e.g., connectors, splices, and lengths of fiber) are known, the overall link loss may be quickly calculated by addition and subtraction of decibel quantities.<ref>
Ratio 1 1.25 1.6 2 2.5 3.2 4 5 6.3 8 10
{{cite book
dB 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
| title = Fiber optic installer's field manual
| author-first = Bob |author-last=Chomycz
| publisher = McGraw-Hill Professional
| year = 2000
| isbn = 978-0-07-135604-6
| pages = 123–126
| url = {{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=B810SYIAa4IC |page=123 }}
}}</ref>


In spectrometry and optics, the ] used to measure ] is equivalent to −1&nbsp;B.
This useful approximate table of logarithms is easily reconstructed or memorized.


=== The 4 &rarr; 6 energy rule === === Video and digital imaging ===
In connection with video and digital ]s, decibels generally represent ratios of video voltages or digitized light intensities, using 20&nbsp;log of the ratio, even when the represented intensity (optical power) is directly proportional to the voltage generated by the sensor, not to its square, as in a ] where response voltage is linear in intensity.<ref>
{{cite book
| title = The Colour Image Processing Handbook
| author = Stephen J. Sangwine and Robin E. N. Horne
| publisher = Springer
| year = 1998
| isbn = 978-0-412-80620-9
| pages = 127–130
| url = {{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=oEsZiCt5VOAC |page=127 }}
}}</ref>
Thus, a camera ] or ] quoted as 40&nbsp;dB represents a ratio of 100:1 between optical signal intensity and optical-equivalent dark-noise intensity, not a 10,000:1 intensity (power) ratio as 40&nbsp;dB might suggest.<ref>
{{cite book
| title = Introduction to optical engineering
| author = Francis T. S. Yu and Xiangyang Yang
| publisher = Cambridge University Press
| year = 1997
| isbn = 978-0-521-57493-8
| pages = 102–103
| url = {{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=RYm7WwjsyzkC |page=120 }}
}}</ref>
Sometimes the 20&nbsp;log ratio definition is applied to electron counts or photon counts directly, which are proportional to sensor signal amplitude without the need to consider whether the voltage response to intensity is linear.<ref>
{{cite book
| title = Image sensors and signal processing for digital still cameras
| chapter = Basics of Image Sensors
| author = Junichi Nakamura
| editor = Junichi Nakamura
| publisher = CRC Press
| year = 2006
| isbn = 978-0-8493-3545-7
| pages = 79–83
| chapter-url = {{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=UY6QzgzgieYC |page=79 }}
}}</ref>


However, as mentioned above, the 10&nbsp;log intensity convention prevails more generally in physical optics, including fiber optics, so the terminology can become murky between the conventions of digital photographic technology and physics. Most commonly, quantities called "dynamic range" or "signal-to-noise" (of the camera) would be specified in 20&nbsp;log dB, but in related contexts (e.g. attenuation, gain, intensifier SNR, or rejection ratio) the term should be interpreted cautiously, as confusion of the two units can result in very large misunderstandings of the value.
To one decimal place of precision, 4.x is 6.x in dB (energy).


Photographers typically use an alternative base-2 log unit, the ], to describe light intensity ratios or dynamic range.
Examples:
* 4.0 &rarr; 6.0 dB
* 4.3 &rarr; 6.3 dB
* 4.7 &rarr; 6.7 dB


== Suffixes and reference values <span class="anchor" id="Suffixes"></span> ==
=== The "789" rule ===
Suffixes are commonly attached to the basic dB unit in order to indicate the reference value by which the ratio is calculated. For example, dBm indicates power measurement relative to 1&nbsp;milliwatt.


In cases where the unit value of the reference is stated, the decibel value is known as "absolute". If the unit value of the reference is not explicitly stated, as in the dB gain of an amplifier, then the decibel value is considered relative.
To one decimal place of precision, x &rarr; (&frac12; x + 5.0 dB) for 7.0 &le; x &le; 10.


This form of attaching suffixes to dB is widespread in practice, albeit being against the rules promulgated by standards bodies (ISO and IEC),<ref name=NIST2008>Thompson, A. and Taylor, B. N. sec 8.7, "Logarithmic quantities and units: level, neper, bel", ''Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI) 2008 Edition'', NIST Special Publication 811, 2nd printing (November 2008), SP811 </ref> given the "unacceptability of attaching information to units"{{efn|"When one gives the value of a quantity, it is incorrect to attach letters or other symbols to the unit in order to provide information about the quantity or its conditions of measurement. Instead, the letters or other symbols should be attached to the quantity."{{r|NIST2008|p=16}}}} and the "unacceptability of mixing information with units".{{efn|"When one gives the value of a quantity, any information concerning the quantity or its conditions of measurement must be presented in such a way as not to be associated with the unit. This means that quantities must be defined so that they can be expressed solely in acceptable units..."{{r|NIST2008|p=17}}}} The ] standard recommends the following format:<ref name="IEC60027-3"/> {{nowrap|''L''<sub>''x''</sub> (re ''x''<sub>ref</sub>)}} or as {{nowrap|''L''<sub>''x''/''x''<sub>ref</sub></sub>}}, where ''x'' is the quantity symbol and ''x''<sub>ref</sub> is the value of the reference quantity, e.g., {{nowrap|''L''<sub>''E''</sub> (re 1 μV/m)}}&nbsp;=&nbsp;20&nbsp;dB or {{nowrap|''L''<sub>''E''/(1 μV/m)</sub>}} =&nbsp;20&nbsp;dB for the ] ''E'' relative to 1&nbsp;μV/m reference value.
Examples:
If the measurement result 20&nbsp;dB is presented separately, it can be specified using the information in parentheses, which is then part of the surrounding text and not a part of the unit: 20&nbsp;dB (re: 1&nbsp;μV/m) or 20&nbsp;dB (1&nbsp;μV/m).
* 7.0 &rarr; &frac12; 7.0 + 5.0 dB = 3.5 + 5.0 dB = 8.5 dB
* 7.5 &rarr; &frac12; 7.5 + 5.0 dB = 3.75 + 5.0 dB = 8.75 dB
* 8.2 &rarr; &frac12; 8.2 + 5.0 dB = 4.1 + 5.0 dB = 9.1 dB
* 9.9 &rarr; &frac12; 9.9 + 5.0 dB = 4.95 + 5.0 dB = 9.95 dB
* 10.0 &rarr; &frac12; 10.0 + 5.0 dB = 5.0 + 5.0 dB = 10 dB


Outside of documents adhering to SI units, the practice is very common as illustrated by the following examples. There is no general rule, with various discipline-specific practices. Sometimes the suffix is a unit symbol ("W","K","m"), sometimes it is a transliteration of a unit symbol ("uV" instead of μV for microvolt), sometimes it is an acronym for the unit's name ("sm" for square meter, "m" for milliwatt), other times it is a mnemonic for the type of quantity being calculated ("i" for antenna gain with respect to an isotropic antenna, "λ" for anything normalized by the EM wavelength), or otherwise a general attribute or identifier about the nature of the quantity ("A" for ] sound pressure level). The suffix is often connected with a ], as in "dB{{nbhyph}}Hz", or with a space, as in "dB&nbsp;HL", or enclosed in parentheses, as in "dB(sm)", or with no intervening character, as in "dBm" (which is non-compliant with international standards).
=== −3 dB &asymp; ½ power ===


== List of suffixes ==
A level difference of ±3 dB is roughly double/half power (equal to a ratio of 1.995). That is why it is commonly used as a marking on sound equipment and the like.


=== Voltage ===
Another common sequence is 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50 ... . These ]s are very close to being equally spaced in terms of their logarithms. The actual values would be 1, 2.15, 4.64, 10 ... .
Since the decibel is defined with respect to '']'', not '']'', conversions of voltage ratios to decibels must square the amplitude, or use the factor of 20 instead of 10, as discussed above.


] (the ]) and ] (the power dissipated as ] by the 600&nbsp;Ω ])]]
The conversion for decibels is often simplified to: "+3 dB means two times the power and 1.414 times the voltage", and "+6 dB means four times the power and two times the voltage ".


; dB{{sub| V}} : dB(V<sub>]</sub>)&nbsp;– ]age relative to 1&nbsp;volt, regardless of impedance.<ref name=clqgmk>{{cite web |title=V<sub>RMS</sub> / dBm / dBu / dBV calculator |department=Utilities |publisher=Analog Devices |url=http://designtools.analog.com/dt/dbconvert/dbconvert.html |via=designtools.analog.com |access-date=2016-09-16}}</ref> This is used to measure microphone sensitivity, and also to specify the consumer ] of {{nowrap|−10 dBV}}, in order to reduce manufacturing costs relative to equipment using a {{nowrap|+4 dBu}} line-level signal.<ref>{{cite book |last=Winer |first=Ethan |year=2013 |title=The Audio Expert: Everything you need to know about audio |publisher=Focal Press |isbn=978-0-240-82100-9 |page= |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TIfOAwAAQBAJ |via=Google }}</ref>
While this is accurate for many situations, it is not exact. As stated above, decibels are defined so that +10 dB means "ten times the power". From this, we calculate that +3 dB actually multiplies the power by 10<sup>3/10</sup>. This is a power ratio of 1.9953 or about 0.25% different from the "times 2" power ratio that is sometimes assumed. A level difference of +6 dB is 3.9811, about 0.5% different from 4.


; dB{{sub| u}} or dB{{sub| v}} : ] ]age relative to {{nowrap|<math>V = \sqrt{600\ \Omega\ \cdot\ 0.001\ \mathsf{W}\;} \approx 0.7746\ \mathsf{V}\ </math>}} (i.e. the voltage that would dissipate 1&nbsp;mW into a 600&nbsp;Ω load). An ] voltage of 1&nbsp;V therefore corresponds to <math>\ 20\cdot\log_{10} \left( \frac{\ 1\ V_\mathsf{RMS}\ }{ \sqrt{0.6\ }\ V} \right) = 2.218\ \mathsf{dB_u} ~.</math><ref name=clqgmk/> Originally dB{{sub| v }}, it was changed to dB{{sub| u}} to avoid confusion with dB{{sub| V}}.<ref>{{cite web |first=Stas |last=Bekman |title=3.3 – What is the difference between dBv, dBu, dBV, dBm, dB&nbsp;SPL, and plain old dB? Why not just use regular voltage and power measurements? |website=stason.org |department=Entertainment audio |series=TULARC |url=http://stason.org/TULARC/entertainment/audio/pro/3-3-What-is-the-difference-between-dBv-dBu-dBV-dBm-dB.html }}</ref> The ''v'' comes from ''volt'', while ''u'' comes from the ] displayed on a ].<ref>{{cite AV media |first=Rupert |last=Neve |author-link=Rupert Neve |date=9 October 2015 |title=Creation of the dB{{sub| u}} standard level reference |medium=video |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b02P4f3CBuM | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211030/b02P4f3CBuM |archive-date=2021-10-30 }}{{cbignore}}</ref>{{paragraphbreak}}dB{{sub| u}} can be used as a measure of voltage, regardless of impedance, but is derived from a 600&nbsp;Ω load dissipating 0&nbsp;dB{{sub| m}} (1&nbsp;mW). The reference voltage comes from the computation <math>\ 7 \mathsf{V} = \sqrt{R \cdot P\ }\ </math> where <math>\ R\ </math> is the resistance and <math>\ P\ </math> is the power.
To contrive a more serious example, consider converting a large decibel figure into its linear ratio, for example 120 dB. The power ratio is correctly calculated as a ratio of 10<sup>12</sup> or one trillion. But if we use the assumption that 3 dB means "times 2", we would calculate a power ratio of 2<sup>120/3</sup> = 2<sup>40</sup> = 1.0995 × 10<sup>12</sup>, giving a 10% error.


: In ], equipment may be calibrated to indicate a "0" on the VU meters some finite time after a signal has been applied at an amplitude of {{nobr|+4 dBu}}. Consumer equipment typically uses a lower "nominal" signal level of {{nobr|−10 dB{{sub| V}} .}}<ref>{{cite web |title=dB or not dB&nbsp;? |website=deltamedia.com |url=http://www.deltamedia.com/resource/db_or_not_db.html |url-status=dead |access-date=2013-09-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130620064637/http://www.deltamedia.com/resource/db_or_not_db.html |archive-date=20 June 2013 }}</ref> Therefore, many devices offer dual voltage operation (with different gain or "trim" settings) for interoperability reasons. A switch or adjustment that covers at least the range between {{nobr|+4 dB{{sub| u}}}} and {{nobr|−10 dB{{sub| V}}}} is common in professional equipment.
===6 dB per bit===


; dB{{sub| m0s}} : Defined by Recommendation ITU-R V.574&nbsp;; dB{{sub| mV}}: dB(mV<sub>RMS</sub>) – ] ]age relative to 1&nbsp;millivolt across 75&nbsp;Ω.<ref>
In ], each ] offered by the system doubles the (voltage) resolution, corresponding to a 6 dB ratio. For instance, a 16-bit (linear) audio format offers an approximate theoretical maximum of (16 x 6) = 96 dB, meaning that the maximum signal (see ''0 dBFS'', above) is 96 dB above the ].
{{cite book
|title=The IEEE Standard Dictionary of Electrical and Electronics terms
|edition=6th
|year=1996
|orig-year=1941
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-1-55937-833-8
}}
</ref> Widely used in ] networks, where the nominal strength of a single TV signal at the receiver terminals is about 0&nbsp;dB{{sub| mV}}. Cable&nbsp;TV uses 75&nbsp;Ω coaxial cable, so 0&nbsp;dB{{sub| mV}} corresponds to −78.75&nbsp;dB{{sub| W}} {{nobr|( −48.75 dB{{sub| m}} )}} or approximately 13&nbsp;nW.

; dB{{sub| μV}} or dB{{sub| uV}} : dB(μV<sub>]</sub>) – ]age relative to 1&nbsp;microvolt. Widely used in television and aerial amplifier specifications. 60&nbsp;dBμV&nbsp;= 0&nbsp;dB{{sub| mV}}.

=== Acoustics ===
Probably the most common usage of "decibels" in reference to sound level is dB{{sub| SPL}}, ] referenced to the nominal threshold of human hearing:<ref>
{{cite book
| title = Audio postproduction for digital video
| first = Jay | last = Rose
| publisher = Focal Press
| year = 2002
| isbn = 978-1-57820-116-7
| page = 25
| url = {{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=sUcRegHAXdkC |page=25 }}
}}</ref> The measures of pressure (a root-power quantity) use the factor of 20, and the measures of power (e.g. dB{{sub| SIL}} and dB{{sub| SWL}}) use the factor of 10.
; dB{{sub| SPL}} : dB{{sub| SPL}} (]) – for sound in air and other gases, relative to 20&nbsp;micropascals (μPa), or {{val|2|e=-5|u=Pa}}, approximately the quietest sound a human can hear. For ] and other liquids, a reference pressure of 1&nbsp;μPa is used.<ref>Morfey, C. L. (2001). Dictionary of Acoustics. Academic Press, San Diego.</ref>{{paragraphbreak}} An RMS sound pressure of one pascal corresponds to a level of 94&nbsp;dB&nbsp;SPL.
; dB{{sub| SIL}} : dB ] – relative to 10<sup>−12</sup>&nbsp;W/m<sup>2</sup>, which is roughly the ] in air.
; dB{{sub| SWL}} : dB ] – relative to 10<sup>−12</sup>&nbsp;W.
; dB{{sub| A}}, dB{{sub| B}}, and dB{{sub| C}} : These symbols are often used to denote the use of different ]s, used to approximate the human ear's ] to sound, although the measurement is still in dB&nbsp;(SPL). These measurements usually refer to noise and its effects on humans and other animals, and they are widely used in industry while discussing noise control issues, regulations and environmental standards. Other variations that may be seen are dB{{sub| A}} or ]. According to standards from the International Electro-technical Committee (])<ref>{{cite book |title=IEC 61672-1:2013 Electroacoustics - Sound Level meters - Part 1: Specifications |date=2013 |publisher=International Electrotechnical Committee |location=Geneva}}</ref> and the American National Standards Institute, ],<ref>] , 2.3 Sound Level, p. 2–3.</ref> the preferred usage is to write {{nobr| {{mvar|L}}{{sub| A}} {{=}} {{mvar|x}}&nbsp;dB .}} Nevertheless, the units dB{{sub| A}} and dB(A) are still commonly used as a shorthand for A{{nbhyph}}weighted measurements. Compare ], used in telecommunications.
; dB{{sub| HL}} : dB ] is used in ]s as a measure of hearing loss. The reference level varies with frequency according to a ] as defined in ANSI and other standards, such that the resulting audiogram shows deviation from what is regarded as 'normal' hearing.{{Citation needed|date=March 2008}}
; dB{{sub| Q}} : sometimes used to denote weighted noise level, commonly using the ]{{Citation needed|date=March 2008}}
; dB{{sub| pp}} : relative to the peak to peak sound pressure.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Zimmer |first1=Walter M.X. |first2=Mark P. |last2=Johnson |first3=Peter T. |last3=Madsen |first4=Peter L. |last4=Tyack |year=2005 |title=Echolocation clicks of free-ranging Cuvier's beaked whales (''Ziphius cavirostris'') |journal=] |volume=117 |issue=6 |pages=3919–3927 |doi=10.1121/1.1910225 |pmid=16018493 |bibcode=2005ASAJ..117.3919Z |hdl=1912/2358 }}</ref>
; dB{{sub| G}} : G‑weighted spectrum<ref>{{cite web | title = Turbine sound measurements |via=wustl.edu | url = http://oto2.wustl.edu/cochlea/wt4.html | url-status = dead | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101212221829/http://oto2.wustl.edu/cochlea/wt4.html | archive-date = 12 December 2010 }}</ref>

=== Audio electronics ===
See also dB{{sub| V}} and dB{{sub| u}} above.

; ] : dB(mW) – power relative to 1&nbsp;]. In audio and telephony, dB{{sub| m}} is typically referenced relative to a 600&nbsp;Ω impedance,<ref>{{cite book|last=Bigelow |first=Stephen |year=2001 |title=Understanding Telephone Electronics |publisher=Newnes Press |place=Boston, MA |isbn=978-0750671750 |page= |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780750671750/page/16 }}</ref> which corresponds to a voltage level of 0.775&nbsp;volts or 775&nbsp;millivolts.
; ] : Power in dB{{sub| m}} (described above) measured at a ].
; ] : dB(]) – the ] of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before ] occurs. Full-scale may be defined as the power level of a full-scale ] or alternatively a full-scale ]. A signal measured with reference to a full-scale sine-wave appears 3&nbsp;dB weaker when referenced to a full-scale square wave, thus: 0&nbsp;dBFS(fullscale sine wave) = −3&nbsp;dB{{sub| FS}} (fullscale square wave).
; dB{{sub| VU}} : dB ]<ref>{{cite journal |last=Thar |first=D. |year=1998 |title=Case Studies: Transient sounds through communication headsets |journal=Applied Occupational and Environmental Hygiene |volume=13 |issue=10 |pages=691–697 |doi=10.1080/1047322X.1998.10390142 }}</ref>
; dB{{sub| TP}} : dB(true peak) – ] of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs.<ref>]</ref> In digital systems, 0&nbsp;dB{{sub| TP}} would equal the highest level (number) the processor is capable of representing. Measured values are always negative or zero, since they are less than or equal to full-scale.

=== Radar ===
; ] : dB(Z) – decibel relative to Z&nbsp;= 1&nbsp;mm{{sup|6 }}⋅m{{sup|−3 }}:<ref>{{cite web |title=Terms starting with&nbsp;'''D''' |department=Glossary |publisher=U.S. ] |website=weather.gov |url=https://www.weather.gov/jetstream/glossary_d<!-- Former URL: http://www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream/append/glossary_d.htm --> |access-date=2013-04-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190808140856/https://www.weather.gov/jetstream/glossary_d |archive-date=2019-08-08 |url-status=live}}</ref> energy of reflectivity (weather radar), related to the amount of transmitted power returned to the radar receiver. Values above 20&nbsp;dB{{sub| Z}} usually indicate falling precipitation.<ref>{{cite web |title=Frequently Asked Questions |department=RIDGE Radar |publisher=U.S. ] |website=weather.gov |url=https://www.weather.gov/jetstream/radarfaq#reflcolor |access-date=2019-08-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190331123302/https://www.weather.gov/jetstream/radarfaq#reflcolor |archive-date=2019-03-31 |url-status=live }}</ref>
; dB{{sub| sm}} : dB(m²) – decibel relative to one square meter: measure of the ] (RCS) of a target. The power reflected by the target is proportional to its RCS. "Stealth" aircraft and insects have negative RCS measured in dB{{sub| sm }}, large flat plates or non-stealthy aircraft have positive values.<ref>{{cite web |title=dBsm |department=Definition |website=Everything&nbsp;2 |url=http://everything2.com/title/dBsm |access-date=2019-08-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190610170944/https://everything2.com/title/dBsm?%2F |archive-date=10 June 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref>

=== Radio power, energy, and field strength ===
; ] : relative to carrier – in ], this indicates the relative levels of noise or sideband power, compared with the carrier power. Compare dB{{sub| C}}, used in acoustics.
; dB{{sub| pp}} : relative to the maximum value of the peak power.
; dB{{sub| J}} : energy relative to 1&nbsp;]. 1&nbsp;joule&nbsp;= 1&nbsp;watt second&nbsp;= 1&nbsp;watt per hertz, so ] can be expressed in dB{{sub| J }}.
; ] : dB(mW) – power relative to 1&nbsp;]. In the radio field, dB{{sub| m}} is usually referenced to a 50&nbsp;Ω load, with the resultant voltage being 0.224&nbsp;volts.<ref>{{cite book |last=Carr |first=Joseph |author-link=Joseph Carr |year=2002 |title=RF Components and Circuits |publisher=Newnes |isbn=978-0750648448 |pages=45–46 }}</ref>
; dB{{sub| μV/m }}, dB{{sub| uV/m }}, or dB{{sub| μ }} :<ref name="dBμ">{{cite web |title=The dBμ vs. dBu mystery: Signal strength vs. field strength? |date=24 February 2015 |website=Radio Time Traveller (radio-timetraveller.blogspot.com) |type=blog |via=blogspot.com |url=http://radio-timetraveller.blogspot.com/2015/02/the-db-versus-dbu-mystery-signal.html |access-date=13 October 2016 }}</ref> dB(μV/m) – ] relative to 1&nbsp;] per ]. The unit is often used to specify the signal strength of a ] ] at a receiving site (the signal measured ''at the antenna output'' is reported in dBμ{{sub| V}}).
; dB{{sub| f}} : dB(fW) – power relative to 1&nbsp;].
; dB{{sub| W}} : dB(W) – power relative to 1&nbsp;].
; dB{{sub| k}} : dB(kW) – power relative to 1&nbsp;].
; dB{{sub| e}} : dB electrical.
; dB{{sub| o}} : dB optical. A change of 1&nbsp;dB{{sub| o}} in optical power can result in a change of up to 2&nbsp;dB{{sub| e}} in electrical signal power in a system that is thermal noise limited.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Chand |first1=N. |last2=Magill |first2=P.D. |last3=Swaminathan |first3=S.V. |last4=Daugherty |first4=T.H. |year=1999 |title=Delivery of digital video and other multimedia services {{nobr|( > 1 Gb/s}} bandwidth) in passband above the 155&nbsp;Mb/s baseband services on a FTTx full service access network |journal=Journal of Lightwave Technology |volume=17 |issue=12 |pages=2449–2460 |doi=10.1109/50.809663 }}</ref>

=== Antenna measurements ===
; dB{{sub| i}} : dB(isotropic) <span id="dBi_anchor" class="anchor"></span> – the ] of an antenna compared with the gain of a theoretical ], which uniformly distributes energy in all directions. ] of the EM field is assumed unless noted otherwise.
; dB{{sub| d}} : dB(dipole) – the ] of an ] compared with the gain a half-wave ]. 0&nbsp;dBd&nbsp;= 2.15&nbsp;dBi
; dB{{sub| iC}} : dB(isotropic circular) – the gain of an antenna compared to the gain of a theoretical ] isotropic antenna. There is no fixed conversion rule between dB{{sub|iC}} and dB{{sub|i}}, as it depends on the receiving antenna and the field polarization.
; dB{{sub| q}} : dB(quarterwave) – the ] of an antenna compared to the gain of a quarter wavelength whip. Rarely used, except in some marketing material; {{nobr| 0 dB{{sub|q}} {{=}} −0.85 dB{{sub|i}} }}
; dB{{sub| sm}} : dB{{sub| m²}}, dB(m²) – decibels relative to one square meter: A measure of the ] for capturing signals of the antenna.<ref>{{cite book |first=David |last=Adamy |year=2004 |title=EW&nbsp;102: A second course in electronic warfare |series=Artech House Radar Library |place=Boston, MA |publisher=Artech House |isbn=9781-58053687-5 |page= |url={{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=-AkfVZskc64C }} |via=Google |access-date=2013-09-16}}</ref>
; dB{{sub| m⁻¹}} : dB(m{{sup|−1}}) – decibels relative to reciprocal of meter: measure of the ].

=== Other measurements ===
; dB{{sub| Hz}} or dB‑Hz : dB(Hz) – bandwidth relative to one hertz. E.g., 20&nbsp;dB{{nbhyph}}Hz corresponds to a bandwidth of 100&nbsp;Hz. Commonly used in ] calculations. Also used in ] (not to be confused with ], in dB).
; ]: dB(overload) – the ] of a signal (usually audio) compared with the maximum which a device can handle before ] occurs. Similar to dB FS, but also applicable to analog systems. According to ITU-T Rec. G.100.1 the level in dB ov of a digital system is defined as: <math display = "block">\ L_\mathsf{ov} = 10 \log_{10} \left( \frac{ P }{\ P_\mathsf{max}\ } \right)\ \ ,</math> with the maximum signal power <math>\ P_\mathsf{max} = 1.0\ ,</math> for a rectangular signal with the maximum amplitude <math>\ x_\mathsf{over} ~.</math> The level of a tone with a digital amplitude (peak value) of <math>\ x_\mathsf{over}\ </math> is therefore <math>\ L_\mathsf{ov} = -3.01\ \mathsf{dB_{ov}} ~.</math><ref>{{cite report |title=The use of the decibel and of relative levels in speech band telecommunications |date=June 2015 |id=ITU-T Rec. G.100.1 |publisher=] (ITU) |place=Geneva, CH |type=tech spec |url=https://www.itu.int/rec/dologin_pub.asp?lang=e&id=T-REC-G.100.1-201506-I!!PDF-E&type=items }}</ref>
; dB{{sub| r}} : dB(relative) – simply a relative difference from something else, which is made apparent in context. The difference of a filter's response to nominal levels, for instance.
; ] : dB above ]. See also '''dB{{sub| rnC}}'''
; dB{{sub| rnC}} : '''dB(rnC)''' represents an audio level measurement, typically in a telephone circuit, relative to a −90&nbsp;dB{{sub| m}} reference level, with the measurement of this level frequency-weighted by a standard C-message weighting filter. The C-message weighting filter was chiefly used in North America. The ] filter is used for this purpose on international circuits.{{efn|See '']'' to see a comparison of frequency response curves for the C-message weighting and psophometric weighting filters.}}<ref>Definition of dB{{sub| rnC}} is given in <br/>{{cite book |editor-first=R.F. |editor-last=Rey |year=1983 |title=Engineering and Operations in the Bell System |edition=2nd |publisher=AT&T Bell Laboratories |place=Murray Hill, NJ |isbn=0-932764-04-5 |page=230 }}</ref>
; dB{{sub| K}} : '''dB(K)''' – decibels relative to 1&nbsp;]; used to express ].<ref>{{cite book |first=K.N. Raja |last=Rao |date=2013-01-31 |df=dmy-all |title=Satellite Communication: Concepts and applications |page= |url={{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=pjEubAt5dk0C }} |via=Google |access-date=2013-09-16 }}</ref>
; dB{{sub| K⁻¹}} or dB{{sub|/K}} : dB(K⁻¹) – decibels relative to 1&nbsp;K⁻¹.<ref>{{cite book |first=Ali Akbar |last=Arabi |year= |title=Comprehensive Glossary of Telecom Abbreviations and Acronyms |page= |url={{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=DVoqmlX6048C }} |via=Google |access-date=2013-09-16 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> — ''not'' decibels per Kelvin: Used for the {{mvar|{{sfrac| G | T }} }} ], a ] used in ], relating the ] {{mvar|G}} to the ] system noise equivalent temperature {{mvar|T}}.<ref>{{cite book |first=Mark E. |last=Long |year=1999 |title=The Digital Satellite TV Handbook |place=Woburn, MA |publisher=Newnes Press |page= |url={{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=L4yQ0iztvQEC }} |access-date=2013-09-16 |df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Mac E. |last=van&nbsp;Valkenburg |date=2001-10-19 |df=dmy-all |title=Reference Data for Engineers: Radio, electronics, computers, and communications |series=Technology & Engineering |editor-first=Wendy M. |editor-last=Middleton |place=Woburn, MA |publisher=Newness Press |isbn=9780-08051596-0 |page= |url={{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=U9RzPGwlic4C }} |via=Google |access-date=2013-09-16}}</ref>

=== List of suffixes in alphabetical order ===

==== Unpunctuated suffixes ====
; dB{{sub| A}} : see ].
; dB{{sub| a}} : see ].
; dB{{sub| B}} : see ].
; ] : relative to carrier – in ], this indicates the relative levels of noise or sideband power, compared with the carrier power.
; dB{{sub| C}} : see ].
; dB{{sub| D}} : see ].
; dB{{sub| d}} : dB(dipole) – the forward gain of an ] compared with a half-wave ]. 0&nbsp;dBd = 2.15&nbsp;dB{{sub| i}}
; dB{{sub| e}} : dB electrical.
; dB{{sub| f}} : dB(fW) – power relative to 1&nbsp;].
; ] : dB(]) – the ] of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before ] occurs. Full-scale may be defined as the power level of a full-scale ] or alternatively a full-scale ]. A signal measured with reference to a full-scale sine-wave appears 3&nbsp;dB weaker when referenced to a full-scale square wave, thus: 0&nbsp;dB{{sub| FS}} (fullscale sine wave) = −3&nbsp;dB{{sub| FS}} (full-scale square wave).
; dB{{sub| G}} : ] spectrum
; dB{{sub| i}} : dB(isotropic) – the forward ] compared with the hypothetical ], which uniformly distributes energy in all directions. ] of the EM field is assumed unless noted otherwise.
; dB{{sub| iC}} : dB(isotropic circular) – the forward gain of an antenna compared to a ] isotropic antenna. There is no fixed conversion rule between dB{{sub| iC}} and dB{{sub| i }}, as it depends on the receiving antenna and the field polarization.
; dB{{sub| J}} : energy relative to 1&nbsp;]: 1&nbsp;joule = 1&nbsp;watt-second = 1&nbsp;watt per hertz, so ] can be expressed in dB{{sub| J }}.
; dB{{sub| k}} : dB(kW) – power relative to 1&nbsp;].
; dB{{sub| K}} :'''dB(K)''' – decibels relative to ]: Used to express ].
; ] : dB(mW) – power relative to 1 ].
; dB{{sub| m²}} or dB{{sub| sm}} : dB(m²) – decibel relative to one square meter
; ] : Power in dB{{sub| m}} measured at a zero transmission level point.
; dB{{sub| m0s}} : Defined by ''Recommendation ITU-R V.574''.
; dB{{sub| mV}} : dB(mV<sub>]</sub>) – ]age relative to 1&nbsp;millivolt across 75&nbsp;Ω.
; dB{{sub| o}} : dB optical. A change of 1&nbsp;dB{{sub| o}} in optical power can result in a change of up to 2&nbsp;dB{{sub| e}} in electrical signal power in system that is thermal noise limited.
; dB{{sub| O}} : see dB{{sub| ov}}
; dB{{sub| ov}} or dB{{sub| O}} : dB(overload) – the ] of a signal (usually audio) compared with the maximum which a device can handle before ] occurs.
; dB{{sub| pp}} : relative to the peak to peak ].
; dB{{sub| pp}} : relative to the maximum value of the peak ].
; dB{{sub| q}} : dB(quarterwave) – the forward gain of an antenna compared to a quarter wavelength whip. Rarely used, except in some marketing material. 0&nbsp;dBq = −0.85&nbsp;dB{{sub| i}}
; dB{{sub| r}} : dB(relative) – simply a relative difference from something else, which is made apparent in context. The difference of a filter's response to nominal levels, for instance.
; ] : dB above ]. See also '''dB{{sub| rnC}}'''
; dB{{sub| rnC}} : '''dB{{sub| rnC}}''' represents an audio level measurement, typically in a telephone circuit, relative to the ], with the measurement of this level frequency-weighted by a standard C-message weighting filter. The C-message weighting filter was chiefly used in North America.
; dB{{sub| sm}} : see dB{{sub| m²}}
; dB{{sub| TP}} : dB(true peak) – ] of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs.
; dB{{sub| u}} or dB{{sub| v}} : ] ]age relative to <math>\ \sqrt{0.6\; }\ \mathsf{V}\ \approx 0.7746\ \mathsf{V}\ \approx -2.218\ \mathsf{dB_V} ~.</math>
; dB{{sub| u0s}} : Defined by ''Recommendation ITU-R V.574''.
; dB{{sub| uV}} : see dB{{sub| μV}}
; dB{{sub| uV/m}} : see dB{{sub| μV/m}}
; dB{{sub| v}} : see dB{{sub| u}}
; dB{{sub| V}} : dB(V<sub>]</sub>) – ]age relative to 1 volt, regardless of impedance.
; dB{{sub| VU}} : dB(VU) dB ]
; dB{{sub| W}} : dB(W) – power relative to 1&nbsp;].
; dB{{sub| W·m⁻²·Hz⁻¹}} : ] relative to 1 W·m⁻²·Hz⁻¹<ref>{{cite web |title=Units and calculations |website=iucaf.org |url=http://www.iucaf.org/sschool/mike/Units_and_Calculations.ppt |access-date=2013-08-24 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303223821/http://www.iucaf.org/sschool/mike/Units_and_Calculations.ppt |archive-date=2016-03-03 }}</ref>
; ] : dB(Z) – decibel relative to Z = 1&nbsp;mm<sup>6</sup>⋅m<sup>−3</sup>
; dB{{sub| μ}} : see dB{{sub| μV/m}}
; dB{{sub| μV}} or dB{{sub| uV}} : dB(μV<sub>]</sub>) – ]age relative to 1&nbsp;] microvolt.
; dB{{sub| μV/m }}, dB{{sub| uV/m }}, or dB{{sub| μ }} : dB(μV/m) – ] relative to 1&nbsp;] per ].

==== Suffixes preceded by a space ====
; dB HL : dB hearing level is used in ]s as a measure of hearing loss.
; dB Q : sometimes used to denote weighted noise level
; dB SIL : dB ] – relative to 10<sup>−12</sup>&nbsp;W/m<sup>2</sup>
; dB SPL : dB SPL (]) – for sound in air and other gases, relative to 20&nbsp;μPa in air or 1&nbsp;μPa in water
; dB SWL : dB ] – relative to 10<sup>−12</sup>&nbsp;W.

==== Suffixes within parentheses ====
; ], ], ], ], ],<!-- possibly also dB(M), but I haven't seen this in practise yet --> and ] : These symbols are often used to denote the use of different ]s, used to approximate the human ear's ] to sound, although the measurement is still in dB (SPL). These measurements usually refer to noise and its effects on humans and other animals, and they are widely used in industry while discussing noise control issues, regulations and environmental standards. Other variations that may be seen are dB<sub>A</sub> or ].

==== Other suffixes ====
; dB{{sub| Hz}} or dB-Hz : dB(Hz) – bandwidth relative to one ]
; dB{{sub| K⁻¹}} or dB{{sub| /K}} : dB(K⁻¹) – decibels relative to ] of ]
; dB{{sub| m⁻¹}} : dB(m⁻¹) – decibel relative to reciprocal of meter: measure of the ]

; mB{{sub| m}} : {{anchor|Millibel}} mB(mW) – power relative to 1&nbsp;], in millibels (one hundredth of a decibel). 100&nbsp;mB{{sub| m}} = 1&nbsp;dB{{sub| m }}. This unit is in the Wi-Fi drivers of the ] kernel<ref>{{cite web |title=Setting {{sc|TX}} power |series=en:users:documentation:iw |website=wireless.kernel.org |url=http://wireless.kernel.org/en/users/Documentation/iw#Setting_TX_power }}</ref> and the regulatory domain sections.<ref>{{cite web |title=Is your Wi Fi ap missing channels&nbsp;12 and 13&nbsp;? |date=16 May 2013 |website=Pentura Labs |via=wordpress.com |url=http://penturalabs.wordpress.com/2013/05/16/is-your-wifi-ap-missing-channels-12-13/ }}</ref>


== See also == == See also ==
{{div col begin|colwidth=8}}
*]
* ]
*]
*] * ]
* ] (L<sub>den</sub>) and ] (Ldl), European and American standards for expressing noise level over an entire day
*]
*] * ]
* ]
*]&mdash;discussion of '''dBA'''
*] * ]
* ]
* {{Section link|One-third octave|Base 10}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
{{div col end}}


== External links == == Notes ==
{{notelist}}


== References ==
*
{{reflist|25em}}
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*


=== Converters === == Further reading ==
* {{cite journal |author-last=Tuffentsammer |author-first=Karl |title=Das Dezilog, eine Brücke zwischen Logarithmen, Dezibel, Neper und Normzahlen |language=de |trans-title=The decilog, a bridge between logarithms, decibel, neper and preferred numbers |journal=VDI-Zeitschrift |volume=98 |date=1956 |pages=267–274}}
*
* {{cite book |title=Logarithmen, Normzahlen, Dezibel, Neper, Phon - natürlich verwandt! |language=de |trans-title=Logarithms, preferred numbers, decibel, neper, phon - naturally related! |author-first=Eugen |author-last=Paulin |date=2007-09-01 |url=http://www.rechenschieber.org/Normzahlen.pdf |access-date=2016-12-18 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161218223050/http://www.rechenschieber.org/Normzahlen.pdf |archive-date=2016-12-18}}
*
*
*
*


== External links ==
==Reference==
*
*
*
* (RF signal and field strengths)
<!--No ads, please!-->


{{Decibel}}
*Martin, W. H., "DeciBel &#8211; The New Name for the Transmission Unit", ''Bell System Technical Journal'', January 1929.
{{SI units}}
{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 22:54, 20 December 2024

Logarithmic unit expressing the ratio of physical quantities This article is about the logarithmic unit. For use of this unit in sound measurements, see Sound pressure level. For other uses, see Decibel (disambiguation).

decibel
Unit systemNon-SI accepted unit
SymboldB
Named afterAlexander Graham Bell
Conversions
1 dB in ...... is equal to ...
   bel   ⁠1/10⁠ bel

The decibel (symbol: dB) is a relative unit of measurement equal to one tenth of a bel (B). It expresses the ratio of two values of a power or root-power quantity on a logarithmic scale. Two signals whose levels differ by one decibel have a power ratio of 10 (approximately 1.26) or root-power ratio of 10 (approximately 1.12).

The unit fundamentally expresses a relative change but may also be used to express an absolute value as the ratio of a value to a fixed reference value; when used in this way, the unit symbol is often suffixed with letter codes that indicate the reference value. For example, for the reference value of 1 volt, a common suffix is "V" (e.g., "20 dBV").

Two principal types of scaling of the decibel are in common use. When expressing a power ratio, it is defined as ten times the logarithm with base 10. That is, a change in power by a factor of 10 corresponds to a 10 dB change in level. When expressing root-power quantities, a change in amplitude by a factor of 10 corresponds to a 20 dB change in level. The decibel scales differ by a factor of two, so that the related power and root-power levels change by the same value in linear systems, where power is proportional to the square of amplitude.

The definition of the decibel originated in the measurement of transmission loss and power in telephony of the early 20th century in the Bell System in the United States. The bel was named in honor of Alexander Graham Bell, but the bel is seldom used. Instead, the decibel is used for a wide variety of measurements in science and engineering, most prominently for sound power in acoustics, in electronics and control theory. In electronics, the gains of amplifiers, attenuation of signals, and signal-to-noise ratios are often expressed in decibels.

History

The decibel originates from methods used to quantify signal loss in telegraph and telephone circuits. Until the mid-1920s, the unit for loss was miles of standard cable (MSC). 1 MSC corresponded to the loss of power over one mile (approximately 1.6 km) of standard telephone cable at a frequency of 5000 radians per second (795.8 Hz), and matched closely the smallest attenuation detectable to a listener. A standard telephone cable was "a cable having uniformly distributed resistance of 88 ohms per loop-mile and uniformly distributed shunt capacitance of 0.054 microfarads per mile" (approximately corresponding to 19 gauge wire).

In 1924, Bell Telephone Laboratories received a favorable response to a new unit definition among members of the International Advisory Committee on Long Distance Telephony in Europe and replaced the MSC with the Transmission Unit (TU). 1 TU was defined such that the number of TUs was ten times the base-10 logarithm of the ratio of measured power to a reference power. The definition was conveniently chosen such that 1 TU approximated 1 MSC; specifically, 1 MSC was 1.056 TU. In 1928, the Bell system renamed the TU into the decibel, being one tenth of a newly defined unit for the base-10 logarithm of the power ratio. It was named the bel, in honor of the telecommunications pioneer Alexander Graham Bell. The bel is seldom used, as the decibel was the proposed working unit.

The naming and early definition of the decibel is described in the NBS Standard's Yearbook of 1931:

Since the earliest days of the telephone, the need for a unit in which to measure the transmission efficiency of telephone facilities has been recognized. The introduction of cable in 1896 afforded a stable basis for a convenient unit and the "mile of standard" cable came into general use shortly thereafter. This unit was employed up to 1923 when a new unit was adopted as being more suitable for modern telephone work. The new transmission unit is widely used among the foreign telephone organizations and recently it was termed the "decibel" at the suggestion of the International Advisory Committee on Long Distance Telephony.

The decibel may be defined by the statement that two amounts of power differ by 1 decibel when they are in the ratio of 10 and any two amounts of power differ by N decibels when they are in the ratio of 10. The number of transmission units expressing the ratio of any two powers is therefore ten times the common logarithm of that ratio. This method of designating the gain or loss of power in telephone circuits permits direct addition or subtraction of the units expressing the efficiency of different parts of the circuit ...

In 1954, J. W. Horton argued that the use of the decibel as a unit for quantities other than transmission loss led to confusion, and suggested the name logit for "standard magnitudes which combine by multiplication", to contrast with the name unit for "standard magnitudes which combine by addition".

In April 2003, the International Committee for Weights and Measures (CIPM) considered a recommendation for the inclusion of the decibel in the International System of Units (SI), but decided against the proposal. However, the decibel is recognized by other international bodies such as the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and International Organization for Standardization (ISO). The IEC permits the use of the decibel with root-power quantities as well as power and this recommendation is followed by many national standards bodies, such as NIST, which justifies the use of the decibel for voltage ratios. In spite of their widespread use, suffixes (such as in dBA or dBV) are not recognized by the IEC or ISO.

Definition

dB Power ratio Amplitude ratio
100 10000000000 100000
90 1000000000 31623
80 100000000 10000
70 10000000 3162
60 1000000 1000
50 100000 316 .2
40 10000 100
30 1000 31 .62
20 100 10
10 10 3 .162
6 3 .981 ≈ 4 1 .995 ≈ 2
3 1 .995 ≈ 2 1 .413 ≈ √2
1 1 .259 1 .122
0 1 1
−1 0 .794 0 .891
−3 0 .501 ≈ ⁠1/2⁠ 0 .708 ≈ √⁠1/2⁠
−6 0 .251 ≈ ⁠1/4⁠ 0 .501 ≈ ⁠1/2⁠
−10 0 .1 0 .3162
−20 0 .01 0 .1
−30 0 .001 0 .03162
−40 0 .0001 0 .01
−50 0 .00001 0 .003162
−60 0 .000001 0 .001
−70 0 .0000001 0 .0003162
−80 0 .00000001 0 .0001
−90 0 .000000001 0 .00003162
−100 0 .0000000001 0 .00001
An example scale showing power ratios x, amplitude ratios √x, and dB equivalents 10 log10 x


The IEC Standard 60027-3:2002 defines the following quantities. The decibel (dB) is one-tenth of a bel: 1 dB = 0.1 B. The bel (B) is 1⁄2 ln(10) nepers: 1 B = 1⁄2 ln(10) Np. The neper is the change in the level of a root-power quantity when the root-power quantity changes by a factor of e, that is 1 Np = ln(e) = 1, thereby relating all of the units as nondimensional natural log of root-power-quantity ratios, 1 dB = 0.11513... Np = 0.11513.... Finally, the level of a quantity is the logarithm of the ratio of the value of that quantity to a reference value of the same kind of quantity.

Therefore, the bel represents the logarithm of a ratio between two power quantities of 10:1, or the logarithm of a ratio between two root-power quantities of √10:1.

Two signals whose levels differ by one decibel have a power ratio of 10, which is approximately 1.25893, and an amplitude (root-power quantity) ratio of 10 (1.12202).

The bel is rarely used either without a prefix or with SI unit prefixes other than deci; it is customary, for example, to use hundredths of a decibel rather than millibels. Thus, five one-thousandths of a bel would normally be written 0.05 dB, and not 5 mB.

The method of expressing a ratio as a level in decibels depends on whether the measured property is a power quantity or a root-power quantity; see Power, root-power, and field quantities for details.

Power quantities

When referring to measurements of power quantities, a ratio can be expressed as a level in decibels by evaluating ten times the base-10 logarithm of the ratio of the measured quantity to reference value. Thus, the ratio of P (measured power) to P0 (reference power) is represented by LP, that ratio expressed in decibels, which is calculated using the formula:

L P = 1 2 ln ( P P 0 ) Np = 10 log 10 ( P P 0 ) dB {\displaystyle L_{P}={\frac {1}{2}}\ln \!\left({\frac {P}{P_{0}}}\right)\,{\text{Np}}=10\log _{10}\!\left({\frac {P}{P_{0}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}}}

The base-10 logarithm of the ratio of the two power quantities is the number of bels. The number of decibels is ten times the number of bels (equivalently, a decibel is one-tenth of a bel). P and P0 must measure the same type of quantity, and have the same units before calculating the ratio. If P = P0 in the above equation, then LP = 0. If P is greater than P0 then LP is positive; if P is less than P0 then LP is negative.

Rearranging the above equation gives the following formula for P in terms of P0 and LP :

P = 10 L P 10 dB P 0 {\displaystyle P=10^{\frac {L_{P}}{10\,{\text{dB}}}}P_{0}}

Root-power (field) quantities

Main article: Power, root-power, and field quantities

When referring to measurements of root-power quantities, it is usual to consider the ratio of the squares of F (measured) and F0 (reference). This is because the definitions were originally formulated to give the same value for relative ratios for both power and root-power quantities. Thus, the following definition is used:

L F = ln ( F F 0 ) Np = 10 log 10 ( F 2 F 0 2 ) dB = 20 log 10 ( F F 0 ) dB {\displaystyle L_{F}=\ln \!\left({\frac {F}{F_{0}}}\right)\,{\text{Np}}=10\log _{10}\!\left({\frac {F^{2}}{F_{0}^{2}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}}=20\log _{10}\left({\frac {F}{F_{0}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}}}

The formula may be rearranged to give

F = 10 L F 20 dB F 0 {\displaystyle F=10^{\frac {L_{F}}{20\,{\text{dB}}}}F_{0}}

Similarly, in electrical circuits, dissipated power is typically proportional to the square of voltage or current when the impedance is constant. Taking voltage as an example, this leads to the equation for power gain level LG:

L G = 20 log 10 ( V out V in ) dB {\displaystyle L_{G}=20\log _{10}\!\left({\frac {V_{\text{out}}}{V_{\text{in}}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}}}

where Vout is the root-mean-square (rms) output voltage, Vin is the rms input voltage. A similar formula holds for current.

The term root-power quantity is introduced by ISO Standard 80000-1:2009 as a substitute of field quantity. The term field quantity is deprecated by that standard and root-power is used throughout this article.

Relationship between power and root-power levels

Although power and root-power quantities are different quantities, their respective levels are historically measured in the same units, typically decibels. A factor of 2 is introduced to make changes in the respective levels match under restricted conditions such as when the medium is linear and the same waveform is under consideration with changes in amplitude, or the medium impedance is linear and independent of both frequency and time. This relies on the relationship

P ( t ) P 0 = ( F ( t ) F 0 ) 2 {\displaystyle {\frac {P(t)}{P_{0}}}=\left({\frac {F(t)}{F_{0}}}\right)^{2}}

holding. In a nonlinear system, this relationship does not hold by the definition of linearity. However, even in a linear system in which the power quantity is the product of two linearly related quantities (e.g. voltage and current), if the impedance is frequency- or time-dependent, this relationship does not hold in general, for example if the energy spectrum of the waveform changes.

For differences in level, the required relationship is relaxed from that above to one of proportionality (i.e., the reference quantities P0 and F0 need not be related), or equivalently,

P 2 P 1 = ( F 2 F 1 ) 2 {\displaystyle {\frac {P_{2}}{P_{1}}}=\left({\frac {F_{2}}{F_{1}}}\right)^{2}}

must hold to allow the power level difference to be equal to the root-power level difference from power P1 and F1 to P2 and F2. An example might be an amplifier with unity voltage gain independent of load and frequency driving a load with a frequency-dependent impedance: the relative voltage gain of the amplifier is always 0 dB, but the power gain depends on the changing spectral composition of the waveform being amplified. Frequency-dependent impedances may be analyzed by considering the quantities power spectral density and the associated root-power quantities via the Fourier transform, which allows elimination of the frequency dependence in the analysis by analyzing the system at each frequency independently.

Conversions

Since logarithm differences measured in these units often represent power ratios and root-power ratios, values for both are shown below. The bel is traditionally used as a unit of logarithmic power ratio, while the neper is used for logarithmic root-power (amplitude) ratio.

Conversion between units of level and a list of corresponding ratios
Unit In decibels In bels In nepers Power ratio Root-power ratio
1 dB 1 dB 0.1 B 0.11513 Np 10 ≈ 1.25893 10 ≈ 1.12202
1 Np 8.68589 dB 0.868589 B 1 Np e ≈ 7.38906 e ≈ 2.71828
1 B 10 dB 1 B 1.151 3 Np 10 10 ≈ 3.162 28

Examples

The unit dBW is often used to denote a ratio for which the reference is 1 W, and similarly dBm for a 1 mW reference point.

  • Calculating the ratio in decibels of 1 kW (one kilowatt, or 1000 watts) to 1 W yields: L G = 10 log 10 ( 1 000 W 1 W ) dB = 30 dB {\displaystyle L_{G}=10\log _{10}\left({\frac {1\,000\,{\text{W}}}{1\,{\text{W}}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}}=30\,{\text{dB}}}
  • The ratio in decibels of √1000 V ≈ 31.62 V to 1 V is: L G = 20 log 10 ( 31.62 V 1 V ) dB = 30 dB {\displaystyle L_{G}=20\log _{10}\left({\frac {31.62\,{\text{V}}}{1\,{\text{V}}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}}=30\,{\text{dB}}}

(31.62 V / 1 V) ≈ 1 kW / 1 W, illustrating the consequence from the definitions above that LG has the same value, 30 dB, regardless of whether it is obtained from powers or from amplitudes, provided that in the specific system being considered power ratios are equal to amplitude ratios squared.

  • The ratio in decibels of 10 W to 1 mW (one milliwatt) is obtained with the formula: L G = 10 log 10 ( 10 W 0.001 W ) dB = 40 dB {\displaystyle L_{G}=10\log _{10}\left({\frac {10{\text{W}}}{0.001{\text{W}}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}}=40\,{\text{dB}}}
  • The power ratio corresponding to a 3 dB change in level is given by: G = 10 3 10 × 1 = 1.995 26 2 {\displaystyle G=10^{\frac {3}{10}}\times 1=1.995\,26\ldots \approx 2}

A change in power ratio by a factor of 10 corresponds to a change in level of 10 dB. A change in power ratio by a factor of 2 or ⁠1/2⁠ is approximately a change of 3 dB. More precisely, the change is ±3.0103 dB, but this is almost universally rounded to 3 dB in technical writing. This implies an increase in voltage by a factor of √2 ≈ 1.4142. Likewise, a doubling or halving of the voltage, corresponding to a quadrupling or quartering of the power, is commonly described as 6 dB rather than ±6.0206 dB.

Should it be necessary to make the distinction, the number of decibels is written with additional significant figures. 3.000 dB corresponds to a power ratio of 10, or 1.9953, about 0.24% different from exactly 2, and a voltage ratio of 1.4125, 0.12% different from exactly √2. Similarly, an increase of 6.000 dB corresponds to the power ratio is 10 ≈ 3.9811, about 0.5% different from 4.

Properties

The decibel is useful for representing large ratios and for simplifying representation of multiplicative effects, such as attenuation from multiple sources along a signal chain. Its application in systems with additive effects is less intuitive, such as in the combined sound pressure level of two machines operating together. Care is also necessary with decibels directly in fractions and with the units of multiplicative operations.

Reporting large ratios

The logarithmic scale nature of the decibel means that a very large range of ratios can be represented by a convenient number, in a manner similar to scientific notation. This allows one to clearly visualize huge changes of some quantity. See Bode plot and Semi-log plot. For example, 120 dB SPL may be clearer than "a trillion times more intense than the threshold of hearing".

Representation of multiplication operations

Level values in decibels can be added instead of multiplying the underlying power values, which means that the overall gain of a multi-component system, such as a series of amplifier stages, can be calculated by summing the gains in decibels of the individual components, rather than multiply the amplification factors; that is, log(A × B × C) = log(A) + log(B) + log(C). Practically, this means that, armed only with the knowledge that 1 dB is a power gain of approximately 26%, 3 dB is approximately 2× power gain, and 10 dB is 10× power gain, it is possible to determine the power ratio of a system from the gain in dB with only simple addition and multiplication. For example:

  • A system consists of 3 amplifiers in series, with gains (ratio of power out to in) of 10 dB, 8 dB, and 7 dB respectively, for a total gain of 25 dB. Broken into combinations of 10, 3, and 1 dB, this is: 25 dB = 10 dB + 10 dB + 3 dB + 1 dB + 1 dB With an input of 1 watt, the output is approximately 1 W × 10 × 10 × 2 × 1.26 × 1.26 ≈ 317.5 W Calculated precisely, the output is 1 W × 10 ≈ 316.2 W. The approximate value has an error of only +0.4% with respect to the actual value, which is negligible given the precision of the values supplied and the accuracy of most measurement instrumentation.

However, according to its critics, the decibel creates confusion, obscures reasoning, is more related to the era of slide rules than to modern digital processing, and is cumbersome and difficult to interpret. Quantities in decibels are not necessarily additive, thus being "of unacceptable form for use in dimensional analysis". Thus, units require special care in decibel operations. Take, for example, carrier-to-noise-density ratio C/N0 (in hertz), involving carrier power C (in watts) and noise power spectral density N0 (in W/Hz). Expressed in decibels, this ratio would be a subtraction (C/N0)dB = CdBN0 dB. However, the linear-scale units still simplify in the implied fraction, so that the results would be expressed in dB-Hz.

Representation of addition operations

Further information: Logarithmic addition

According to Mitschke, "The advantage of using a logarithmic measure is that in a transmission chain, there are many elements concatenated, and each has its own gain or attenuation. To obtain the total, addition of decibel values is much more convenient than multiplication of the individual factors." However, for the same reason that humans excel at additive operation over multiplication, decibels are awkward in inherently additive operations:

if two machines each individually produce a sound pressure level of, say, 90 dB at a certain point, then when both are operating together we should expect the combined sound pressure level to increase to 93 dB, but certainly not to 180 dB!; suppose that the noise from a machine is measured (including the contribution of background noise) and found to be 87 dBA but when the machine is switched off the background noise alone is measured as 83 dBA. the machine noise may be obtained by 'subtracting' the 83 dBA background noise from the combined level of 87 dBA; i.e., 84.8 dBA.; in order to find a representative value of the sound level in a room a number of measurements are taken at different positions within the room, and an average value is calculated. Compare the logarithmic and arithmetic averages of 70 dB and 90 dB: logarithmic average = 87 dB; arithmetic average = 80 dB.

Addition on a logarithmic scale is called logarithmic addition, and can be defined by taking exponentials to convert to a linear scale, adding there, and then taking logarithms to return. For example, where operations on decibels are logarithmic addition/subtraction and logarithmic multiplication/division, while operations on the linear scale are the usual operations:

87 dBA 83 dBA = 10 log 10 ( 10 87 / 10 10 83 / 10 ) dBA 84.8 dBA {\displaystyle 87\,{\text{dBA}}\ominus 83\,{\text{dBA}}=10\cdot \log _{10}{\bigl (}10^{87/10}-10^{83/10}{\bigr )}\,{\text{dBA}}\approx 84.8\,{\text{dBA}}}
M lm ( 70 , 90 ) = ( 70 dBA + 90 dBA ) / 2 = 10 log 10 ( ( 10 70 / 10 + 10 90 / 10 ) / 2 ) dBA = 10 ( log 10 ( 10 70 / 10 + 10 90 / 10 ) log 10 2 ) dBA 87 dBA {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}M_{\text{lm}}(70,90)&=\left(70\,{\text{dBA}}+90\,{\text{dBA}}\right)/2\\&=10\cdot \log _{10}\left({\bigl (}10^{70/10}+10^{90/10}{\bigr )}/2\right)\,{\text{dBA}}\\&=10\cdot \left(\log _{10}{\bigl (}10^{70/10}+10^{90/10}{\bigr )}-\log _{10}2\right)\,{\text{dBA}}\approx 87\,{\text{dBA}}\end{aligned}}}

The logarithmic mean is obtained from the logarithmic sum by subtracting 10 log 10 2 {\displaystyle 10\log _{10}2} , since logarithmic division is linear subtraction.

Fractions

Attenuation constants, in topics such as optical fiber communication and radio propagation path loss, are often expressed as a fraction or ratio to distance of transmission. In this case, dB/m represents decibel per meter, dB/mi represents decibel per mile, for example. These quantities are to be manipulated obeying the rules of dimensional analysis, e.g., a 100-meter run with a 3.5 dB/km fiber yields a loss of 0.35 dB = 3.5 dB/km × 0.1 km.

Uses

Perception

The human perception of the intensity of sound and light more nearly approximates the logarithm of intensity rather than a linear relationship (see Weber–Fechner law), making the dB scale a useful measure.

Acoustics

The decibel is commonly used in acoustics as a unit of sound power level or sound pressure level. The reference pressure for sound in air is set at the typical threshold of perception of an average human and there are common comparisons used to illustrate different levels of sound pressure. As sound pressure is a root-power quantity, the appropriate version of the unit definition is used:

L p = 20 log 10 ( p rms p ref ) dB , {\displaystyle L_{p}=20\log _{10}\!\left({\frac {p_{\text{rms}}}{p_{\text{ref}}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}},}

where prms is the root mean square of the measured sound pressure and pref is the standard reference sound pressure of 20 micropascals in air or 1 micropascal in water.

Use of the decibel in underwater acoustics leads to confusion, in part because of this difference in reference value.

Sound intensity is proportional to the square of sound pressure. Therefore, the sound intensity level can also be defined as:

L p = 10 log 10 ( I I ref ) dB , {\displaystyle L_{p}=10\log _{10}\!\left({\frac {I}{I_{\text{ref}}}}\right)\,{\text{dB}},}

The human ear has a large dynamic range in sound reception. The ratio of the sound intensity that causes permanent damage during short exposure to that of the quietest sound that the ear can hear is equal to or greater than 1 trillion (10). Such large measurement ranges are conveniently expressed in logarithmic scale: the base-10 logarithm of 10 is 12, which is expressed as a sound intensity level of 120 dB re 1 pW/m. The reference values of I and p in air have been chosen such that this corresponds approximately to a sound pressure level of 120 dB re 20 μPa.

Since the human ear is not equally sensitive to all sound frequencies, the acoustic power spectrum is modified by frequency weighting (A-weighting being the most common standard) to get the weighted acoustic power before converting to a sound level or noise level in decibels.

Further information: Sound pressure § Examples of sound pressure

Telephony

The decibel is used in telephony and audio. Similarly to the use in acoustics, a frequency weighted power is often used. For audio noise measurements in electrical circuits, the weightings are called psophometric weightings.

Electronics

In electronics, the decibel is often used to express power or amplitude ratios (as for gains) in preference to arithmetic ratios or percentages. One advantage is that the total decibel gain of a series of components (such as amplifiers and attenuators) can be calculated simply by summing the decibel gains of the individual components. Similarly, in telecommunications, decibels denote signal gain or loss from a transmitter to a receiver through some medium (free space, waveguide, coaxial cable, fiber optics, etc.) using a link budget.

The decibel unit can also be combined with a reference level, often indicated via a suffix, to create an absolute unit of electric power. For example, it can be combined with "m" for "milliwatt" to produce the "dBm". A power level of 0 dBm corresponds to one milliwatt, and 1 dBm is one decibel greater (about 1.259 mW).

In professional audio specifications, a popular unit is the dBu. This is relative to the root mean square voltage which delivers 1 mW (0 dBm) into a 600-ohm resistor, or √1 mW × 600 Ω ≈ 0.775 VRMS. When used in a 600-ohm circuit (historically, the standard reference impedance in telephone circuits), dBu and dBm are identical.

Optics

In an optical link, if a known amount of optical power, in dBm (referenced to 1 mW), is launched into a fiber, and the losses, in dB (decibels), of each component (e.g., connectors, splices, and lengths of fiber) are known, the overall link loss may be quickly calculated by addition and subtraction of decibel quantities.

In spectrometry and optics, the blocking unit used to measure optical density is equivalent to −1 B.

Video and digital imaging

In connection with video and digital image sensors, decibels generally represent ratios of video voltages or digitized light intensities, using 20 log of the ratio, even when the represented intensity (optical power) is directly proportional to the voltage generated by the sensor, not to its square, as in a CCD imager where response voltage is linear in intensity. Thus, a camera signal-to-noise ratio or dynamic range quoted as 40 dB represents a ratio of 100:1 between optical signal intensity and optical-equivalent dark-noise intensity, not a 10,000:1 intensity (power) ratio as 40 dB might suggest. Sometimes the 20 log ratio definition is applied to electron counts or photon counts directly, which are proportional to sensor signal amplitude without the need to consider whether the voltage response to intensity is linear.

However, as mentioned above, the 10 log intensity convention prevails more generally in physical optics, including fiber optics, so the terminology can become murky between the conventions of digital photographic technology and physics. Most commonly, quantities called "dynamic range" or "signal-to-noise" (of the camera) would be specified in 20 log dB, but in related contexts (e.g. attenuation, gain, intensifier SNR, or rejection ratio) the term should be interpreted cautiously, as confusion of the two units can result in very large misunderstandings of the value.

Photographers typically use an alternative base-2 log unit, the stop, to describe light intensity ratios or dynamic range.

Suffixes and reference values

Suffixes are commonly attached to the basic dB unit in order to indicate the reference value by which the ratio is calculated. For example, dBm indicates power measurement relative to 1 milliwatt.

In cases where the unit value of the reference is stated, the decibel value is known as "absolute". If the unit value of the reference is not explicitly stated, as in the dB gain of an amplifier, then the decibel value is considered relative.

This form of attaching suffixes to dB is widespread in practice, albeit being against the rules promulgated by standards bodies (ISO and IEC), given the "unacceptability of attaching information to units" and the "unacceptability of mixing information with units". The IEC 60027-3 standard recommends the following format: Lx (re xref) or as Lx/xref, where x is the quantity symbol and xref is the value of the reference quantity, e.g., LE (re 1 μV/m) = 20 dB or LE/(1 μV/m) = 20 dB for the electric field strength E relative to 1 μV/m reference value. If the measurement result 20 dB is presented separately, it can be specified using the information in parentheses, which is then part of the surrounding text and not a part of the unit: 20 dB (re: 1 μV/m) or 20 dB (1 μV/m).

Outside of documents adhering to SI units, the practice is very common as illustrated by the following examples. There is no general rule, with various discipline-specific practices. Sometimes the suffix is a unit symbol ("W","K","m"), sometimes it is a transliteration of a unit symbol ("uV" instead of μV for microvolt), sometimes it is an acronym for the unit's name ("sm" for square meter, "m" for milliwatt), other times it is a mnemonic for the type of quantity being calculated ("i" for antenna gain with respect to an isotropic antenna, "λ" for anything normalized by the EM wavelength), or otherwise a general attribute or identifier about the nature of the quantity ("A" for A-weighted sound pressure level). The suffix is often connected with a hyphen, as in "dB‑Hz", or with a space, as in "dB HL", or enclosed in parentheses, as in "dB(sm)", or with no intervening character, as in "dBm" (which is non-compliant with international standards).

List of suffixes

Voltage

Since the decibel is defined with respect to power, not amplitude, conversions of voltage ratios to decibels must square the amplitude, or use the factor of 20 instead of 10, as discussed above.

A schematic showing the relationship between dB u (the voltage source) and dB m (the power dissipated as heat by the 600 Ω resistor)
dB V
dB(VRMS) – voltage relative to 1 volt, regardless of impedance. This is used to measure microphone sensitivity, and also to specify the consumer line-level of −10 dBV, in order to reduce manufacturing costs relative to equipment using a +4 dBu line-level signal.
dB u or dB v
RMS voltage relative to V = 600   Ω     0.001   W 0.7746   V   {\displaystyle V={\sqrt {600\ \Omega \ \cdot \ 0.001\ {\mathsf {W}}\;}}\approx 0.7746\ {\mathsf {V}}\ } (i.e. the voltage that would dissipate 1 mW into a 600 Ω load). An RMS voltage of 1 V therefore corresponds to   20 log 10 (   1   V R M S   0.6     V ) = 2.218   d B u   . {\displaystyle \ 20\cdot \log _{10}\left({\frac {\ 1\ V_{\mathsf {RMS}}\ }{{\sqrt {0.6\ }}\ V}}\right)=2.218\ {\mathsf {dB_{u}}}~.} Originally dB v , it was changed to dB u to avoid confusion with dB V. The v comes from volt, while u comes from the volume unit displayed on a VU meter.dB u can be used as a measure of voltage, regardless of impedance, but is derived from a 600 Ω load dissipating 0 dB m (1 mW). The reference voltage comes from the computation   7 V = R P     {\displaystyle \ 7{\mathsf {V}}={\sqrt {R\cdot P\ }}\ } where   R   {\displaystyle \ R\ } is the resistance and   P   {\displaystyle \ P\ } is the power.
In professional audio, equipment may be calibrated to indicate a "0" on the VU meters some finite time after a signal has been applied at an amplitude of +4 dBu. Consumer equipment typically uses a lower "nominal" signal level of −10 dB V . Therefore, many devices offer dual voltage operation (with different gain or "trim" settings) for interoperability reasons. A switch or adjustment that covers at least the range between +4 dB u and −10 dB V is common in professional equipment.
dB m0s
Defined by Recommendation ITU-R V.574 ; dB mV: dB(mVRMS) – root mean square voltage relative to 1 millivolt across 75 Ω. Widely used in cable television networks, where the nominal strength of a single TV signal at the receiver terminals is about 0 dB mV. Cable TV uses 75 Ω coaxial cable, so 0 dB mV corresponds to −78.75 dB W ( −48.75 dB m ) or approximately 13 nW.
dB μV or dB uV
dB(μVRMS) – voltage relative to 1 microvolt. Widely used in television and aerial amplifier specifications. 60 dBμV = 0 dB mV.

Acoustics

Probably the most common usage of "decibels" in reference to sound level is dB SPL, sound pressure level referenced to the nominal threshold of human hearing: The measures of pressure (a root-power quantity) use the factor of 20, and the measures of power (e.g. dB SIL and dB SWL) use the factor of 10.

dB SPL
dB SPL (sound pressure level) – for sound in air and other gases, relative to 20 micropascals (μPa), or 2×10 Pa, approximately the quietest sound a human can hear. For sound in water and other liquids, a reference pressure of 1 μPa is used. An RMS sound pressure of one pascal corresponds to a level of 94 dB SPL.
dB SIL
dB sound intensity level – relative to 10 W/m, which is roughly the threshold of human hearing in air.
dB SWL
dB sound power level – relative to 10 W.
dB A, dB B, and dB C
These symbols are often used to denote the use of different weighting filters, used to approximate the human ear's response to sound, although the measurement is still in dB (SPL). These measurements usually refer to noise and its effects on humans and other animals, and they are widely used in industry while discussing noise control issues, regulations and environmental standards. Other variations that may be seen are dB A or dB(A). According to standards from the International Electro-technical Committee (IEC 61672-2013) and the American National Standards Institute, ANSI S1.4, the preferred usage is to write L A = x dB . Nevertheless, the units dB A and dB(A) are still commonly used as a shorthand for A‑weighted measurements. Compare dB c, used in telecommunications.
dB HL
dB hearing level is used in audiograms as a measure of hearing loss. The reference level varies with frequency according to a minimum audibility curve as defined in ANSI and other standards, such that the resulting audiogram shows deviation from what is regarded as 'normal' hearing.
dB Q
sometimes used to denote weighted noise level, commonly using the ITU-R 468 noise weighting
dB pp
relative to the peak to peak sound pressure.
dB G
G‑weighted spectrum

Audio electronics

See also dB V and dB u above.

dB m
dB(mW) – power relative to 1 milliwatt. In audio and telephony, dB m is typically referenced relative to a 600 Ω impedance, which corresponds to a voltage level of 0.775 volts or 775 millivolts.
dB m0
Power in dB m (described above) measured at a zero transmission level point.
dB FS
dB(full scale) – the amplitude of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs. Full-scale may be defined as the power level of a full-scale sinusoid or alternatively a full-scale square wave. A signal measured with reference to a full-scale sine-wave appears 3 dB weaker when referenced to a full-scale square wave, thus: 0 dBFS(fullscale sine wave) = −3 dB FS (fullscale square wave).
dB VU
dB volume unit
dB TP
dB(true peak) – peak amplitude of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs. In digital systems, 0 dB TP would equal the highest level (number) the processor is capable of representing. Measured values are always negative or zero, since they are less than or equal to full-scale.

Radar

dB Z
dB(Z) – decibel relative to Z = 1 mm⋅m: energy of reflectivity (weather radar), related to the amount of transmitted power returned to the radar receiver. Values above 20 dB Z usually indicate falling precipitation.
dB sm
dB(m²) – decibel relative to one square meter: measure of the radar cross section (RCS) of a target. The power reflected by the target is proportional to its RCS. "Stealth" aircraft and insects have negative RCS measured in dB sm , large flat plates or non-stealthy aircraft have positive values.

Radio power, energy, and field strength

dB c
relative to carrier – in telecommunications, this indicates the relative levels of noise or sideband power, compared with the carrier power. Compare dB C, used in acoustics.
dB pp
relative to the maximum value of the peak power.
dB J
energy relative to 1 joule. 1 joule = 1 watt second = 1 watt per hertz, so power spectral density can be expressed in dB J .
dB m
dB(mW) – power relative to 1 milliwatt. In the radio field, dB m is usually referenced to a 50 Ω load, with the resultant voltage being 0.224 volts.
dB μV/m , dB uV/m , or dB μ 
dB(μV/m) – electric field strength relative to 1 microvolt per meter. The unit is often used to specify the signal strength of a television broadcast at a receiving site (the signal measured at the antenna output is reported in dBμ V).
dB f
dB(fW) – power relative to 1 femtowatt.
dB W
dB(W) – power relative to 1 watt.
dB k
dB(kW) – power relative to 1 kilowatt.
dB e
dB electrical.
dB o
dB optical. A change of 1 dB o in optical power can result in a change of up to 2 dB e in electrical signal power in a system that is thermal noise limited.

Antenna measurements

dB i
dB(isotropic) – the gain of an antenna compared with the gain of a theoretical isotropic antenna, which uniformly distributes energy in all directions. Linear polarization of the EM field is assumed unless noted otherwise.
dB d
dB(dipole) – the gain of an antenna compared with the gain a half-wave dipole antenna. 0 dBd = 2.15 dBi
dB iC
dB(isotropic circular) – the gain of an antenna compared to the gain of a theoretical circularly polarized isotropic antenna. There is no fixed conversion rule between dBiC and dBi, as it depends on the receiving antenna and the field polarization.
dB q
dB(quarterwave) – the gain of an antenna compared to the gain of a quarter wavelength whip. Rarely used, except in some marketing material; 0 dBq = −0.85 dBi
dB sm
dB m², dB(m²) – decibels relative to one square meter: A measure of the effective area for capturing signals of the antenna.
dB m⁻¹
dB(m) – decibels relative to reciprocal of meter: measure of the antenna factor.

Other measurements

dB Hz or dB‑Hz
dB(Hz) – bandwidth relative to one hertz. E.g., 20 dB‑Hz corresponds to a bandwidth of 100 Hz. Commonly used in link budget calculations. Also used in carrier-to-noise-density ratio (not to be confused with carrier-to-noise ratio, in dB).
dB ov or dB O
dB(overload) – the amplitude of a signal (usually audio) compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs. Similar to dB FS, but also applicable to analog systems. According to ITU-T Rec. G.100.1 the level in dB ov of a digital system is defined as:   L o v = 10 log 10 ( P   P m a x   )   [ d B o v ]   , {\displaystyle \ L_{\mathsf {ov}}=10\log _{10}\left({\frac {P}{\ P_{\mathsf {max}}\ }}\right)\ \ ,} with the maximum signal power   P m a x = 1.0   , {\displaystyle \ P_{\mathsf {max}}=1.0\ ,} for a rectangular signal with the maximum amplitude   x o v e r   . {\displaystyle \ x_{\mathsf {over}}~.} The level of a tone with a digital amplitude (peak value) of   x o v e r   {\displaystyle \ x_{\mathsf {over}}\ } is therefore   L o v = 3.01   d B o v   . {\displaystyle \ L_{\mathsf {ov}}=-3.01\ {\mathsf {dB_{ov}}}~.}
dB r
dB(relative) – simply a relative difference from something else, which is made apparent in context. The difference of a filter's response to nominal levels, for instance.
dB rn
dB above reference noise. See also dB rnC
dB rnC
dB(rnC) represents an audio level measurement, typically in a telephone circuit, relative to a −90 dB m reference level, with the measurement of this level frequency-weighted by a standard C-message weighting filter. The C-message weighting filter was chiefly used in North America. The psophometric filter is used for this purpose on international circuits.
dB K
dB(K) – decibels relative to 1 K; used to express noise temperature.
dB K⁻¹ or dB/K
dB(K⁻¹) – decibels relative to 1 K⁻¹. — not decibels per Kelvin: Used for the ⁠ G / T ⁠ (G/T) factor, a figure of merit used in satellite communications, relating the antenna gain G to the receiver system noise equivalent temperature T.

List of suffixes in alphabetical order

Unpunctuated suffixes

dB A
see dB(A).
dB a
see dB rn adjusted.
dB B
see dB(B).
dB c
relative to carrier – in telecommunications, this indicates the relative levels of noise or sideband power, compared with the carrier power.
dB C
see dB(C).
dB D
see dB(D).
dB d
dB(dipole) – the forward gain of an antenna compared with a half-wave dipole antenna. 0 dBd = 2.15 dB i
dB e
dB electrical.
dB f
dB(fW) – power relative to 1 femtowatt.
dB FS
dB(full scale) – the amplitude of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs. Full-scale may be defined as the power level of a full-scale sinusoid or alternatively a full-scale square wave. A signal measured with reference to a full-scale sine-wave appears 3 dB weaker when referenced to a full-scale square wave, thus: 0 dB FS (fullscale sine wave) = −3 dB FS (full-scale square wave).
dB G
G-weighted spectrum
dB i
dB(isotropic) – the forward gain of an antenna compared with the hypothetical isotropic antenna, which uniformly distributes energy in all directions. Linear polarization of the EM field is assumed unless noted otherwise.
dB iC
dB(isotropic circular) – the forward gain of an antenna compared to a circularly polarized isotropic antenna. There is no fixed conversion rule between dB iC and dB i , as it depends on the receiving antenna and the field polarization.
dB J
energy relative to 1 joule: 1 joule = 1 watt-second = 1 watt per hertz, so power spectral density can be expressed in dB J .
dB k
dB(kW) – power relative to 1 kilowatt.
dB K
dB(K) – decibels relative to kelvin: Used to express noise temperature.
dB m
dB(mW) – power relative to 1 milliwatt.
dB m² or dB sm
dB(m²) – decibel relative to one square meter
dB m0
Power in dB m measured at a zero transmission level point.
dB m0s
Defined by Recommendation ITU-R V.574.
dB mV
dB(mVRMS) – voltage relative to 1 millivolt across 75 Ω.
dB o
dB optical. A change of 1 dB o in optical power can result in a change of up to 2 dB e in electrical signal power in system that is thermal noise limited.
dB O
see dB ov
dB ov or dB O
dB(overload) – the amplitude of a signal (usually audio) compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs.
dB pp
relative to the peak to peak sound pressure.
dB pp
relative to the maximum value of the peak electrical power.
dB q
dB(quarterwave) – the forward gain of an antenna compared to a quarter wavelength whip. Rarely used, except in some marketing material. 0 dBq = −0.85 dB i
dB r
dB(relative) – simply a relative difference from something else, which is made apparent in context. The difference of a filter's response to nominal levels, for instance.
dB rn
dB above reference noise. See also dB rnC
dB rnC
dB rnC represents an audio level measurement, typically in a telephone circuit, relative to the circuit noise level, with the measurement of this level frequency-weighted by a standard C-message weighting filter. The C-message weighting filter was chiefly used in North America.
dB sm
see dB m²
dB TP
dB(true peak) – peak amplitude of a signal compared with the maximum which a device can handle before clipping occurs.
dB u or dB v
RMS voltage relative to   0.6   V   0.7746   V   2.218   d B V   . {\displaystyle \ {\sqrt {0.6\;}}\ {\mathsf {V}}\ \approx 0.7746\ {\mathsf {V}}\ \approx -2.218\ {\mathsf {dB_{V}}}~.}
dB u0s
Defined by Recommendation ITU-R V.574.
dB uV
see dB μV
dB uV/m
see dB μV/m
dB v
see dB u
dB V
dB(VRMS) – voltage relative to 1 volt, regardless of impedance.
dB VU
dB(VU) dB volume unit
dB W
dB(W) – power relative to 1 watt.
dB W·m⁻²·Hz⁻¹
spectral density relative to 1 W·m⁻²·Hz⁻¹
dB Z
dB(Z) – decibel relative to Z = 1 mm⋅m
dB μ
see dB μV/m
dB μV or dB uV
dB(μVRMS) – voltage relative to 1 root mean square microvolt.
dB μV/m , dB uV/m , or dB μ 
dB(μV/m) – electric field strength relative to 1 microvolt per meter.

Suffixes preceded by a space

dB HL
dB hearing level is used in audiograms as a measure of hearing loss.
dB Q
sometimes used to denote weighted noise level
dB SIL
dB sound intensity level – relative to 10 W/m
dB SPL
dB SPL (sound pressure level) – for sound in air and other gases, relative to 20 μPa in air or 1 μPa in water
dB SWL
dB sound power level – relative to 10 W.

Suffixes within parentheses

dB(A), dB(B), dB(C), dB(D), dB(G), and dB(Z)
These symbols are often used to denote the use of different weighting filters, used to approximate the human ear's response to sound, although the measurement is still in dB (SPL). These measurements usually refer to noise and its effects on humans and other animals, and they are widely used in industry while discussing noise control issues, regulations and environmental standards. Other variations that may be seen are dBA or dBA.

Other suffixes

dB Hz or dB-Hz
dB(Hz) – bandwidth relative to one Hertz
dB K⁻¹ or dB /K
dB(K⁻¹) – decibels relative to reciprocal of kelvin
dB m⁻¹
dB(m⁻¹) – decibel relative to reciprocal of meter: measure of the antenna factor
mB m
mB(mW) – power relative to 1 milliwatt, in millibels (one hundredth of a decibel). 100 mB m = 1 dB m . This unit is in the Wi-Fi drivers of the Linux kernel and the regulatory domain sections.

See also

Notes

  1. "When one gives the value of a quantity, it is incorrect to attach letters or other symbols to the unit in order to provide information about the quantity or its conditions of measurement. Instead, the letters or other symbols should be attached to the quantity."
  2. "When one gives the value of a quantity, any information concerning the quantity or its conditions of measurement must be presented in such a way as not to be associated with the unit. This means that quantities must be defined so that they can be expressed solely in acceptable units..."
  3. See psophometric weighting to see a comparison of frequency response curves for the C-message weighting and psophometric weighting filters.

References

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Further reading

  • Tuffentsammer, Karl (1956). "Das Dezilog, eine Brücke zwischen Logarithmen, Dezibel, Neper und Normzahlen" [The decilog, a bridge between logarithms, decibel, neper and preferred numbers]. VDI-Zeitschrift (in German). 98: 267–274.
  • Paulin, Eugen (1 September 2007). Logarithmen, Normzahlen, Dezibel, Neper, Phon - natürlich verwandt! [Logarithms, preferred numbers, decibel, neper, phon - naturally related!] (PDF) (in German). Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 December 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2016.

External links

Decibel suffixes (dB)
See also
logarithmic unit
link budget
signal noise
telecommunications
SI units
Base units
Derived units
with special names
Other accepted units
See also
Categories: