DBm
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Since it is referenced to the watt, it is an absolute unit, used when measuring absolute power. It should not be confused with dB, a dimensionless unit, which is used when measuring the ratio between two values, such as signal-to-noise ratio.
Unit conversion
Zero dBm equals one milliwatt. A 3 dBm increase represents roughly doubling the power, which means that 3 dBm equals roughly 2 mW. For a 3 dBm decrease the power is reduced by about one half, making −3 dBm equal to about 0.5 milliwatt. To express an arbitrary power P as x dBm, or go in the other direction, the equations
- [x = 10 \log_(P / (1 \ \mathrm))]
- [P =(1 \ \mathrm) 10^],
| dBm level | Power | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 80 dBm | 100000 W | Typical transmission power of FM radio station |
| 60 dBm | 1000 W | Typical RF power inside microwave oven |
| 40 dBm | 10 W | |
| 36 dBm | 4 W | |
| 30 dBm | 1 W | Typical RF leakage from microwave oven |
| 27 dBm | 500 mW | Typical cellular phone transmission power |
| 26 dBm | 400 mW | |
| 25 dBm | 320 mW | |
| 24 dBm | 250 mW | |
| 23 dBm | 200 mW | |
| 22 dBm | 160 mW | |
| 21 dBm | 125 mW | |
| 20 dBm | 100 mW | Bluetooth Class 1 radio, 100 m. range |
| 15 dBm | 32 mW | |
| 10 dBm | 10 mW | |
| 5 dBm | 3.2 mW | |
| 4 dBm | 2.5 mW | |
| 3 dBm | 2.0 mW | |
| 2 dBm | 1.6 mW | |
| 1 dBm | 1.3 mW | |
| 0 dBm | 1.0 mW | Bluetooth standard (Class 3) radio, 10 m. range |
| −1 dBm | 0.79 mW | |
| −5 dBm | 0.32 mW | |
| −10 dBm | 0.1 mW | |
| −20 dBm | 0.01 mW | |
| −30 dBm | 0.001 mW | |
| −40 dBm | 0.0001 mW | |
| −50 dBm | 0.00001 mW | |
| −60 dBm | 0.000001 mW | |
| −70 dBm | 0.0000001 mW | Average range (−60 to −80dBm) of Wireless signal over a network. |
| −80 dBm | 0.00000001 mW | |
| −111 dBm | Thermal noise floor for commercial GPS signal bandwidth (2MHz). | |
| −127.5 dBm | 0.00000000000018 mW | Typical received signal power from GPS satellite. |
| −174 dBm | Thermal noise floor for 1 Hz bandwidth. | |
| −infinity dBm | 0 mW |
Note 2: In DOD practice, unweighted measurement is normally understood, applicable to a certain bandwidth, which must be stated or implied.
Note 3: In European practice, psophometric weighting may be implied, as indicated by context; equivalent to dBm0p, which is preferred.
See also
Zero dBm transmission level pointSource
- This article contains material from the Federal Standard 1037C (in support of MIL-STD-188), which, as a work of the United States Government, is in the public domain.
External links
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