Sam Jester
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Greetings,
I am attempting to do some RF analysis for interference and was curious how I apply receiver sensitivity.
I have a receiver that was given a minimum sensitivity of -83 dBm and the typical IF channel bandwidth is 450KHz. In this scenario, what does -83 dBm represent? Normally when I see this I just assume "dBm/Hz" but was told I should be applying the bandwidth to get the real receiver sensitivity to Hz (-83 dBm - (10*LOG10(450e3/1) == -140 dBm/Hz)
Is this correct?
The issue I am having when applying this however is that there are other receivers (specifically GPS L1) with a given receiver sensitivity of -130 dBm and a IF channel bandwidth of 2.046MHz (it actually gave 20 MHz however I see this as an error as it should've been a channel bandwidth), as this equates to -193 dBm/Hz receiver sensitivity there has to be something wrong.
Main goal: I want to put receiver sensitivities in dBm/Hz for easy comparison. As I am doing RF co-channel interference I would like to evaluate my output power (in dBm/Hz) to the receiver sensitivity and see if I am above or below the sensitivity of the "victim" receiver.
Thank you!
I am attempting to do some RF analysis for interference and was curious how I apply receiver sensitivity.
I have a receiver that was given a minimum sensitivity of -83 dBm and the typical IF channel bandwidth is 450KHz. In this scenario, what does -83 dBm represent? Normally when I see this I just assume "dBm/Hz" but was told I should be applying the bandwidth to get the real receiver sensitivity to Hz (-83 dBm - (10*LOG10(450e3/1) == -140 dBm/Hz)
Is this correct?
The issue I am having when applying this however is that there are other receivers (specifically GPS L1) with a given receiver sensitivity of -130 dBm and a IF channel bandwidth of 2.046MHz (it actually gave 20 MHz however I see this as an error as it should've been a channel bandwidth), as this equates to -193 dBm/Hz receiver sensitivity there has to be something wrong.
Main goal: I want to put receiver sensitivities in dBm/Hz for easy comparison. As I am doing RF co-channel interference I would like to evaluate my output power (in dBm/Hz) to the receiver sensitivity and see if I am above or below the sensitivity of the "victim" receiver.
Thank you!
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