Decibel
A decibel (or dB) measures ratios of power or intensity. It expresses them as an exponential function. One bel is a power ratio of 10:1, and is divided into ten decibels. An increase of three decibels is approximately a doubling of power. Decibels are often used in measuring telecommunication signals. With electric audio signals, there are several decibel units, relative to several bases. For example, dBm is relative to one milliwatt.
It's been said that the smallest difference humans can hear is 0 dB and is related to the Absolute threshold of hearing, although this is very subjective at best.
History
[change | change source]The bel unit was named after Alexander Graham Bell. This unit was so rough that it is more typical to use the decibel, which is one bel divided by ten. Before bels, there was the Transmission Unit (TU).
Examples and Protection
[change | change source]Often, decibels are used to say how loud a sound is relative to the threshold of hearing. The decibel is not an SI unit. The table here uses dBSPL as units of sound to indicate consensus on hearing protection. Some examples of sounds are:
Sound Level | Examples |
---|---|
171 dB | Next to a loud rifle being shot |
150 dB | Right next to a jet engine |
110-140 dB | Jet engine at 100 meters |
130-140 dB | Where most people begin to feel pain |
130 dB | Trumpet (a half meter in front of) |
120 dB | Vuvuzela horn (1 meter in front of), risk of immediate hearing loss |
110 dB | Gas chainsaw |
100 dB | Jack hammer |
80-90 dB | Traffic on a busy roadway |
60-80 dB | Passenger car |
40-60 dB | Normal conversation |
20-30 dB | Very calm room |
10 dB | Light leaf rustling, calm breathing |
0 dB | Hearing threshold right next to ear |
Hearing protection can also be used to shield from ear damage. This table gives some safe limits for the level of sound so that the ears are not damaged.
Decibels | Maximum Exposure Time |
---|---|
90 | 8 hours |
92 | 6 hours |
95 | 4 hours |
97 | 3 hours |
100 | 2 hours |
102 | 90 minutes |
105 | 60 minutes |
110 | 30 minutes |
115 | 10–15 minutes |
120 | 3–5 minutes |
References
[change | change source]- ↑ Pocket Ref, General Sciences, pages 322-323.