3 dB point
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The half-power point is the point at which the output Electric power, power has dropped to half of its peak value; that is, at a level of approximately -3 Decibel, dB. In Filter (signal processing), filters, optical filters, and electronic amplifiers, the half-power point is also known as half-power bandwidth and is a commonly used definition for the cutoff frequency. In the characterization of Antenna (radio), antennas the half-power point is also known as half-power beamwidth and relates to measurement position as an angle and describes Directional antenna, directionality.


Amplifiers and filters

This occurs when the output voltage has dropped to 1/ (~0.707) of the maximum output voltage and the power has dropped by half. A bandpass amplifier will have two half-power points, while a Low-pass filter, low-pass amplifier or a High-pass filter, high-pass amplifier will have only one. The Bandwidth (signal processing), bandwidth of a filter or amplifier is usually defined as the difference between the lower and upper half-power points. This is, therefore, also known as the 3 dB bandwidth. There is no lower half-power point for a low-pass amplifier, so the bandwidth is measured relative to direct current, DC, i.e., 0 Hz. There is no upper half-power point for an ideal high-pass amplifier, its bandwidth is theoretically infinite. In practice the stopband and transition band are use to characterize a high-pass.


Antenna beams

In antennas, the expression ''half-power point'' does not relate to frequency: instead, it describes the extent in space of an antenna beam. The half-power point is the angle off antenna boresight, boresight at which the antenna gain first falls to half power (approximately -3 dB) from the peak. The angle between the points is known as the ''half-power beam width'' (or simply ''beam width''). Beamwidth is usually but not always expressed in degrees and for the horizontal plane. It refers to the ''main lobe'', when referenced to the peak effective radiated power of the main lobe. Note that other definitions of beam width exist, such as the distance between nulls and distance between first side lobes.


Calculation

The beamwidth can be computed for arbitrary antenna arrays. Defining the array manifold as the complex response of the \mathrm element antenna array as \mathrm(\theta), where \mathrm(\theta) is a matrix with \mathrm rows, the beam pattern is first computed as:E. Tuncer and B. Friedlander (Editors), "Classical and Modern Direction-of-Arrival Estimation", Academic Press, 2009. :\mathrm(\theta) = \frac\mathrm(\theta_)^\mathrm(\theta) where \mathrm(\theta_)^ is the conjugate transpose of \mathrm at the reference angle \theta_. From the beam pattern \mathrm(\theta), the antenna power is computed as: :\mathrm = , \mathrm, ^ The ''half-power beamwidth'' (HPBW) is then found as the range of \theta where \mathrm = 0.5\mathrm_.


See also

* Antenna aperture * Angular resolution *Full width at half maximum


Notes


References

{{FS1037C MS188 Electronic amplifiers Antennas (radio)