Half-power point
The half-power point or half-power bandwidth is the point at which the output power has dropped to half of its peak value; that is, at a level of approximately -3 dB.[1][lower-alpha 1] In filters, optical filters, electronic amplifiers,[2] the half-power point is a commonly used definition for the cutoff frequency.
In the characterization of antennas the half-power point relates to measurement position as an angle and describes directionality.
Amplifiers and filters
This occurs when the output voltage has dropped to 1/√2 (~0.707) of the maximum output voltage[lower-alpha 2] and the power has dropped by half.[lower-alpha 1] A bandpass amplifier will have two half-power points, whilst a low pass amplifier or a high pass amplifier will have only one.
The bandwidth of an 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, i.e., 0 rad/s.
Antennas
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 boresight at which the antenna gain first falls to half power (approximately -3 dB)[lower-alpha 1] from the peak. The angle between the -3 dB points is known as the beamwidth.[3]
See also
Notes
- Exact:
- Exact:
References
- "Power bandwidth - MATLAB powerbw". uk.mathworks.com. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
- Schlessinger, Monroe (1995). Infrared technology fundamentals (2nd ed., rev. and expanded. ed.). New York: M. Dekker. ISBN 0824792599.
- Antenna Introduction / Basics (PDF), retrieved 2017-08-08