db

listen to the pronunciation of db
English - Turkish
desibel
(Askeri) desibel (decibel)
"decibel" iciN KISALTMA
database
(Bilgisayar) veri tabanı

Hacker şirketin veri tabanında bulunan hassas dosyalara erişimi kazandı. - The hacker gained access to sensitive files in the company's database.

database
veri tabanı,veritabanı
database
veri tabanı veritabanı
Turkish - Turkish
(Kimya) Dubniyum elementinin simgesi
Desibel
English - English
Deutsche Bahn (German Railways)
database
daybook. The symbol for the element dubnium. decibel. the written abbreviation of decibel or decibels
{i} chemical symbol of dubnium, unnilpentium, artificially produced transuranic radioactive chemical element that is very unstable
{i} unit of measurement for gauging the intensity of sound
Decibel A unit for measuring the relative strength of a signal Usually expressed as the logarithmic ratio of the strength of a transmitted signal to the strength of the original signal A decibel is one tenth of a "bel"
A common unit for measuring audio levels It uses a logarithmic scale, which roughly corresponds to how the ear hears differences in amplitude
(db) abbreviation for decibel, the logarithmic acoustical unit scale for sound levels
Abbreviation for "decibel," a unit of measurement for the loudness of audio
  Abbreviation for decibel(s)   One tenth of the common logarithm of the ratio of relative powers, equal to 0 1 B (bel)   Note 1:   The decibel is the conventional relative power ratio, rather than the bel, for expressing relative powers because the decibel is smaller and therefore more convenient than the bel   The ratio in dB is given by
decibel, logarithmic representation of a ratio often used to express gain or loss
Decibel One-tenth of a Bell, a logarithmic measurement of electrical power, voltage or current ratios
A unit of measure used to express the volume of a sound
- The unit used to measure sound pressure level The dB is a logarithmic expression, so it takes double the power to get a 3 dB increase, and ten times the power to get a 10 dB increase
– decibel, an analog unit of measure of signal strength, volume, or signal loss due to resistance as expressed in logarithmic form
A logarithmic unit of relative signal level For signal power, P(dB) = 10log(P1/P2) represents the power level P1 as compared with reference level P2 Differs from dBu in that the latter is referenced to a reference P2 level of 0 775Vrms
An abbreviation of the term Decibel, a unit used in comparing signal strengths
Decibel Standard Unit, used to express the relative strength of a signal Expresses either a gain or loss in power between the input and output devices
A dB is a unit of measure of signal strength, usually the relation between a transmitted signal and a standard signal source Every 3 dB = 50% of signal strength, so therefore a 6 dB loss = a loss of 75% of total signal strength
1 A relative unit of measure between two sound or audio signal levels A difference of 1 dB is considered to be the smallest that can be detected by the human ear An increase of 6 dB equals twice the sound pressure 2 As a measure of sound pressure levels, used to indicate loudness Note - dB is NOT "cool soundman lingo" for a direct box! See: DI DC (Direct Current): Electrical current that flows in only one direction Delay: 1 The postponement of an audio signal for a specific time, usually measured in milliseconds 2 A device designed to delay an audio signal DI: The proper abbreviation for a direct box Anyone who says "Hey, you! Toss me that DB!" just sounds plain silly! Every good soundman knows that dB stands for decibel! See: dB (Decibel)
Decibel
Decibels
A unit stating the logarithmic ratio between two amounts of power Typically used in receiver and transmitter measurements
The unit of measurement for sound, using a logarithmic scale It is an expression of the relative loudness of a sound or power level 4
Abbreviation for decibel The decibel is the standard unit of measure for expressing the amount of signal power gained or lost in the course of a transmission
a logarithmic unit of sound intensity; 10 times the logarithm of the ratio of the sound intensity to some reference intensity
Decibel - A logarithmic expression of ratios Can be found by taking ten times the common logarithm of the ratio of two power levels, or 20 times the common logarithm of the ratio of two voltage levels
deciBel A logarithmic unit which defines the ratio between two powers P1 and P2 Ratio in dB = 10 log10 (P1/P2) The original unit was the Bel, named after Alexander Graham Bell, but is inconveniently large Used in power budgets to describe the optical loss over a particular link and therefore the optical power needed over the link in order to get a signal to the other end Used in fibre specifications to describe the loss per metre in the fibre, where the lower the loss the better
Decibel A logarithmic scale used as a measure of relative power In optical signal transmission, attenuation (loss) is expressed as dB/km
db
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