Why is 1 Decibel = 10 Log (Power1/Power2)?

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The discussion clarifies the relationship between decibels (dB) and Bels, emphasizing that 1 dB equals 0.1 Bel by definition. It explains that power differences measured in Bels use the formula Log(Power1/Power2), while those measured in dB use 10 Log(Power1/Power2). This means that a power difference expressed in dB is ten times larger than when expressed in Bels. Participants in the discussion seek further examples to understand this relationship, ultimately confirming that the two units measure the same power difference but on different scales. The key takeaway is that the logarithmic nature of the measurements accounts for the factor of ten between the two units.
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I know that

1 Bel = Log (Power1/Power2)

and 1 decibel = 0.1 bel

then why is 1 decibel = 10 Log (Power1/Power2)

and not 0.1 Log (Power1/Power2)

Thanks

SK
 
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Originally posted by sk381

1 Bel = Log (Power1/Power2)
Not true. See below.
then why is 1 decibel = 10 Log (Power1/Power2)
It isn't.

1 dB = 0.1 Bel (this is true)

This is what Bel and dB mean:

Power difference (measured in Bels) = Log (Power1/Power2)
Power difference (measured in dB) = 10 Log (Power1/Power2)

Make sense?
 
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Hmm.. not clear yet...

I didn't get it..

Can you give some example to further elucidate?
 


Originally posted by Doc Al
1 dB = 0.1 Bel (this is true)

This is what Bel and dB mean:

Power difference (measured in Bels) = Log (Power1/Power2)
Power difference (measured in dB) = 10 Log (Power1/Power2)
If:
Power difference (measured in Bels) = Log (Power1/Power2)
Power difference (measured in dB) = 10 Log (Power1/Power2)
Then:
Power difference (measured in dB) = 10 * Power difference (measured in Bels)

But you say that:
1 dB = 0.1 Bel

So I don't get it either. :wink:
 


Originally posted by Chen
If:
Power difference (measured in Bels) = Log (Power1/Power2)
Power difference (measured in dB) = 10 Log (Power1/Power2)
Then:
Power difference (measured in dB) = 10 * Power difference (measured in Bels)
Absolutely. If you measure power in dB your answer will be 10 times bigger than if you measured in Bels.
But you say that:
1 dB = 0.1 Bel
Yep.

I'm not sure what you guys don't get.

The key point is that Log(P1/P2) does not equal 1 Bel, it is a measurement in units of Bels.

Example: Say P1 = 1000; P2 = 10;
Log (1000/10) = 2 Bels
10 Log (1000/10) = 20 dB
 
lol, never mind. I'm not supposed to be awake anyway.
 
Ok...
but then how do we arrive at the conclusion that 1 dB = 0.1 Bell
 
Just combine the two statements:
Power difference (measured in dB) * 1 dB = 10 * Power difference (measured in Bels) * 1 Bel.
The power difference is the same so:
1 dB = 10 Bel.
 
Originally posted by sk381
Ok...
but then how do we arrive at the conclusion that 1 dB = 0.1 Bell
First realize that 1 dB = 0.1 Bel by definition. (The prefix 'deci' means 1/10.)

But it all makes sense. A given power level P, measured with respect to the reference power level P_{ref}, would equal \log_{10}(\frac{P}{P_{ref}}) \b{Bel} = 10 \log_{10}(\frac{P}{P_{ref}}) \b{dB}. So, 1 Bel = 10 dB.
 
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Originally posted by Chen
Just combine the two statements:
Power difference (measured in dB) * 1 dB = 10 * Power difference (measured in Bels) * 1 Bel.
The power difference is the same so:
1 dB = 10 Bel.
Snap out of it, Chen. You're still not quite awake. :smile:

The power difference is the same, just measured using different units.
[Log(Power1/Power2)]Bels = [10 Log(Power1/Power2)]dB
 
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