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db

The decibel (dB) is a logarithmic unit used to express the ratio between two quantities, most often power or a field quantity such as voltage or sound pressure. It is not an SI unit, but a convenient way to compare magnitudes by referencing a chosen standard.

For power ratios, the dB value is defined as Lp = 10 log10(P1/Pref), where Pref is the reference

Common references include dBm (power relative to 1 milliwatt) and dBW (relative to 1 watt). In electronics,

Interpreting changes: a 3 dB increase roughly doubles the power; a 10 dB increase corresponds to a

Applications are widespread, including audio engineering, telecommunications, signal processing, and acoustics, where dB conveys gains, losses,

power.
For
quantities
proportional
to
the
square
of
a
quantity
(such
as
voltage
or
current
with
constant
impedance),
the
dB
value
is
often
written
as
L
=
20
log10(Q1/Qref),
since
power
scales
with
the
square
of
the
quantity.
dBV
expresses
a
voltage
ratio
relative
to
1
volt.
In
acoustics,
dB
SPL
(sound
pressure
level)
uses
p0
=
20
micropascals
in
air
as
the
reference.
tenfold
increase
in
power.
In
voltage
terms,
a
20
dB
change
represents
a
tenfold
change
in
voltage
for
a
fixed
impedance.
Because
the
decibel
is
a
logarithmic
scale,
large
ranges
of
ratios
can
be
described
compactly,
and
dB
values
are
additive
for
cascaded
systems.
and
dynamic
range
in
a
consistent,
relative
framework.