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Level (logarithmic quantity)

In science and engineering, a power level and a field level (also called a root-power level) are logarithmic magnitudes of certain quantities referenced to a standard reference value of the same type.

  • A power level is a logarithmic quantity used to measure power, power density or sometimes energy, with commonly used unit decibel (dB).
  • A field level (or root-power level) is a logarithmic quantity used to measure quantities of which the square is typically proportional to power (for instance, the square of voltage is proportional to power by the inverse of the conductor's resistance), etc., with commonly used units neper (Np) or decibel (dB).

The type of level and choice of units indicate the scaling of the logarithm of the ratio between the quantity and its reference value, though a logarithm may be considered to be a dimensionless quantity.[1][2][3] The reference values for each type of quantity are often specified by international standards.

Power and field levels are used in electronic engineering, telecommunications, acoustics and related disciplines. Power levels are used for signal power, noise power, sound power, sound exposure, etc. Field levels are used for voltage, current, sound pressure.[4][clarification needed]

Power level edit

Level of a power quantity, denoted LP, is defined by

 

where

  • P is the power quantity;
  • P0 is the reference value of P.

Field (or root-power) level edit

The level of a root-power quantity (also known as a field quantity), denoted LF, is defined by[5]

 

where

  • F is the root-power quantity, proportional to the square root of power quantity;
  • F0 is the reference value of F.

If the power quantity P is proportional to F2, and if the reference value of the power quantity, P0, is in the same proportion to F02, the levels LF and LP are equal.

The neper, bel, and decibel (one tenth of a bel) are units of level that are often applied to such quantities as power, intensity, or gain.[6] The neper, bel, and decibel are related by[7]

  • 1 B = 1/2 loge10 Np;
  • 1 dB = 0.1 B = 1/20 loge10 Np.

Standards edit

Level and its units are defined in ISO 80000-3.

The ISO standard defines each of the quantities power level and field level to be dimensionless, with 1 Np = 1. This is motivated by simplifying the expressions involved, as in systems of natural units.

Related quantities edit

Logarithmic ratio quantity edit

Power and field quantities are part of a larger class, logarithmic ratio quantities.

ANSI/ASA S1.1-2013 defines a class of quantities it calls levels. It defines a level of a quantity Q, denoted LQ, as[8]

 

where

  • r is the base of the logarithm;
  • Q is the quantity;
  • Q0 is the reference value of Q.

For the level of a root-power quantity, the base of the logarithm is r = e. For the level of a power quantity, the base of the logarithm is r = e2.[9]

Logarithmic frequency ratio edit

The logarithmic frequency ratio (also known as frequency level) of two frequencies is the logarithm of their ratio, and may be expressed using the unit octave (symbol: oct) corresponding to the ratio 2 or the unit decade (symbol: dec) corresponding to the ratio 10:[7]

 

In music theory, the octave is a unit used with logarithm base 2 (called interval).[10] A semitone is one twelfth of an octave. A cent is one hundredth of a semitone. In this context, the reference frequency is taken to be C0, four octaves below middle C.[11]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  • Fletcher, H. (1934), "Loudness, pitch and the timbre of musical tones and their relation to the intensity, the frequency and the overtone structure", Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 6 (2): 59, Bibcode:1934ASAJ....6...59F, doi:10.1121/1.1915704
  • Taylor, Barry (1995), Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI): The Metric System, Diane Publishing Co., p. 28, ISBN 9780788125799
  • ISO 80000-3: Quantities and units, vol. Part 3: Space and Time, International Organization for Standardization, 2006
  • Carey, W. M. (2006), "Sound Sources and Levels in the Ocean", IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, 31 (1): 61, Bibcode:2006IJOE...31...61C, doi:10.1109/JOE.2006.872214, S2CID 30674485
  • ISO 80000-8: Quantities and units, vol. Part 8: Acoustics, International Organization for Standardization, 2007
  • ANSI/ASA S1.1: Acoustical Terminology, vol. ANSI/ASA S1.1-2013, Acoustical Society of America, 2013
  • Ainslie, Michael A. (2015), "A Century of Sonar: Planetary Oceanography, Underwater Noise Monitoring, and the Terminology of Underwater Sound", Acoustics Today, 11 (1)
  • D'Amore, F. (2015), Effect of moisturizer and lubricant on the finger‒surface sliding contact: tribological and dynamical analysis
  • IEEE/ASTM SI 10: American National Standard for Metric Practice, IEEE Standards Association, 2016
  • Ainslie, Michael A.; Halvorsen, Michele B.; Robinson, Stephen P. (January 2022) [2021-11-09]. "A terminology standard for underwater acoustics and the benefits of international standardization". IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering. IEEE. 47 (1): 179–200. doi:10.1109/JOE.2021.3085947. eISSN 1558-1691. ISSN 0364-9059. S2CID 243948953. (22 pages)
  • ISO 18405:2017 Underwater acoustics – Terminology, International Organization for Standardization, 2022 [2017], retrieved 2022-12-20

level, logarithmic, quantity, level, quantity, redirects, here, other, uses, level, measurement, science, engineering, power, level, field, level, also, called, root, power, level, logarithmic, magnitudes, certain, quantities, referenced, standard, reference, . Level quantity redirects here For other uses see Level measurement In science and engineering a power level and a field level also called a root power level are logarithmic magnitudes of certain quantities referenced to a standard reference value of the same type A power level is a logarithmic quantity used to measure power power density or sometimes energy with commonly used unit decibel dB A field level or root power level is a logarithmic quantity used to measure quantities of which the square is typically proportional to power for instance the square of voltage is proportional to power by the inverse of the conductor s resistance etc with commonly used units neper Np or decibel dB The type of level and choice of units indicate the scaling of the logarithm of the ratio between the quantity and its reference value though a logarithm may be considered to be a dimensionless quantity 1 2 3 The reference values for each type of quantity are often specified by international standards Power and field levels are used in electronic engineering telecommunications acoustics and related disciplines Power levels are used for signal power noise power sound power sound exposure etc Field levels are used for voltage current sound pressure 4 clarification needed Contents 1 Power level 2 Field or root power level 3 Standards 4 Related quantities 4 1 Logarithmic ratio quantity 4 2 Logarithmic frequency ratio 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesPower level editLevel of a power quantity denoted LP is defined by L P 1 2 log e P P 0 N p log 10 P P 0 B 10 log 10 P P 0 d B displaystyle L P frac 1 2 log mathrm e left frac P P 0 right mathrm Np log 10 left frac P P 0 right mathrm B 10 log 10 left frac P P 0 right mathrm dB nbsp where P is the power quantity P0 is the reference value of P Field or root power level editThe level of a root power quantity also known as a field quantity denoted LF is defined by 5 L F log e F F 0 N p 2 log 10 F F 0 B 20 log 10 F F 0 d B displaystyle L F log mathrm e left frac F F 0 right mathrm Np 2 log 10 left frac F F 0 right mathrm B 20 log 10 left frac F F 0 right mathrm dB nbsp where F is the root power quantity proportional to the square root of power quantity F0 is the reference value of F If the power quantity P is proportional to F2 and if the reference value of the power quantity P0 is in the same proportion to F02 the levels LF and LP are equal The neper bel and decibel one tenth of a bel are units of level that are often applied to such quantities as power intensity or gain 6 The neper bel and decibel are related by 7 1 B 1 2 loge10 Np 1 dB 0 1 B 1 20 loge10 Np See also Decibel Conversions and Neper UnitsStandards editLevel and its units are defined in ISO 80000 3 The ISO standard defines each of the quantities power level and field level to be dimensionless with 1 Np 1 This is motivated by simplifying the expressions involved as in systems of natural units Related quantities editLogarithmic ratio quantity edit Power and field quantities are part of a larger class logarithmic ratio quantities ANSI ASA S1 1 2013 defines a class of quantities it calls levels It defines a level of a quantity Q denoted LQ as 8 L Q log r Q Q 0 displaystyle L Q log r left frac Q Q 0 right nbsp where r is the base of the logarithm Q is the quantity Q0 is the reference value of Q For the level of a root power quantity the base of the logarithm is r e For the level of a power quantity the base of the logarithm is r e2 9 Logarithmic frequency ratio edit The logarithmic frequency ratio also known as frequency level of two frequencies is the logarithm of their ratio and may be expressed using the unit octave symbol oct corresponding to the ratio 2 or the unit decade symbol dec corresponding to the ratio 10 7 L f log 2 f f 0 oct log 10 f f 0 dec displaystyle L f log 2 left frac f f 0 right text oct log 10 left frac f f 0 right text dec nbsp In music theory the octave is a unit used with logarithm base 2 called interval 10 A semitone is one twelfth of an octave A cent is one hundredth of a semitone In this context the reference frequency is taken to be C0 four octaves below middle C 11 See also editDecibel Definition Power root power and field quantities Logarithmic scale Sound level disambiguation Leveling tapered floating point Level index arithmetic LI and symmetric level index arithmetic SLI Notes edit IEEE ASTM SI 10 2016 pp 26 27 ISO 80000 3 2006 Carey 2006 pp 61 75 ISO 80000 8 2007 D Amore 2015 Taylor 1995 a b Ainslie Halvorsen amp Robinson 2022 ANSI ASA S1 1 2013 entry 3 01 Ainslie 2015 Fletcher 1934 pp 59 69 ANSI ASA S1 1 2013 References editFletcher H 1934 Loudness pitch and the timbre of musical tones and their relation to the intensity the frequency and the overtone structure Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 6 2 59 Bibcode 1934ASAJ 6 59F doi 10 1121 1 1915704 Taylor Barry 1995 Guide for the Use of the International System of Units SI The Metric System Diane Publishing Co p 28 ISBN 9780788125799 ISO 80000 3 Quantities and units vol Part 3 Space and Time International Organization for Standardization 2006 Carey W M 2006 Sound Sources and Levels in the Ocean IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering 31 1 61 Bibcode 2006IJOE 31 61C doi 10 1109 JOE 2006 872214 S2CID 30674485 ISO 80000 8 Quantities and units vol Part 8 Acoustics International Organization for Standardization 2007 ANSI ASA S1 1 Acoustical Terminology vol ANSI ASA S1 1 2013 Acoustical Society of America 2013 Ainslie Michael A 2015 A Century of Sonar Planetary Oceanography Underwater Noise Monitoring and the Terminology of Underwater Sound Acoustics Today 11 1 D Amore F 2015 Effect of moisturizer and lubricant on the finger surface sliding contact tribological and dynamical analysis IEEE ASTM SI 10 American National Standard for Metric Practice IEEE Standards Association 2016 Ainslie Michael A Halvorsen Michele B Robinson Stephen P January 2022 2021 11 09 A terminology standard for underwater acoustics and the benefits of international standardization IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering IEEE 47 1 179 200 doi 10 1109 JOE 2021 3085947 eISSN 1558 1691 ISSN 0364 9059 S2CID 243948953 1 22 pages ISO 18405 2017 Underwater acoustics Terminology International Organization for Standardization 2022 2017 retrieved 2022 12 20 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Level logarithmic quantity amp oldid 1183340701, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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