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Converting to Logarithmic Units

LabVIEW 8.2 Help
August 2006

NI Part Number:
371361B-01

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On some instruments, you can display amplitude on either a linear scale or a decibel (dB) scale. The linear scale shows the amplitudes as they are. The decibel is a unit of ratio. The decibel scale is a transformation of the linear scale into a logarithmic scale.

The following equations define the decibel. Equation A defines the decibel in terms of power. Equation B defines the decibel in terms of amplitude.

dB = 10log10(P/Pr) (A)

where P is the measured power, Pr is the reference power, and P/Pr is the power ratio.

dB = 20log10(A/Ar) (B)

where A is the measured amplitude, Ar is the reference amplitude, and A/Ar is the voltage ratio.

Equations A and B require a reference value to measure power and amplitude in decibels. The reference value serves as the 0 dB level. Several conventions exist for specifying a reference value. You can use the following common conventions to specify a reference value for calculating decibels:

  • Use the reference one volt-rms squared (1 Vrms2) for power, which yields the unit of measure dBV.
  • Use the reference one volt-rms (1 Vrms) for amplitude, which yields the unit of measure dBV.
  • Use the reference 1 mW into a load of 50 Ω for radio frequencies where 0 dB is 0.22 Vrms, which yields the unit of measure dBm.
  • Use the reference 1 mW into a load of 600 for audio frequencies where 0 dB is 0.78 Vrms, which yields the unit of measure dBm.

When using amplitude or power as the amplitude-squared of the same signal, the resulting decibel level is exactly the same. Multiplying the decibel ratio by two is equivalent to having a squared ratio. Therefore, you obtain the same decibel level and display regardless of whether you use the amplitude or power spectrum.

Displaying Results on a Decibel Scale

Amplitude or power spectra usually are displayed on a decibel scale. Displaying amplitude or power spectra on a decibel scale allows you to view wide dynamic ranges and to see small signal components in the presence of large ones. For example, suppose you want to display a signal containing amplitudes from a minimum of 0.1 V to a maximum of 100 V on a device with a display height of 10 cm. Using a linear scale, if the device requires the entire display height to display the 100 V amplitude, the device displays 10 V of amplitude per centimeter of height. If the device displays 10 V/cm, displaying the 0.1 V amplitude of the signal requires a height of only 0.1 mm. Because a height of 0.1 mm is barely visible on the display screen, you might overlook the 0.1 V amplitude component of the signal. Using a logarithmic scale in decibels allows you to see the 0.1 V amplitude component of the signal.

The following table shows the relationship between the decibel and the power and voltage ratios.

Decibels and Power and Voltage Ratio Relationship
dB Power Ratio Amplitude Ratio
+40 10,000 100
+20 100 10
+6 4 2
+3 2 1.4
0 1 1
–3 1/2 1/1.4
–6 1/4 1/2
–20 1/100 1/10
–40 1/10,000 1/100

The previous table shows how you can compress a wide range of amplitudes into a small set of numbers by using the logarithmic decibel scale.


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