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  2. Spectral leakage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectral_leakage

    [A] [3] The more the leakage, the greater the bandwidth. It is sometimes called noise equivalent bandwidth or equivalent noise bandwidth, because it is proportional to the average power that will be registered by each DFT bin when the input signal contains a random noise component (or is just random noise).

  3. Bandwidth (signal processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandwidth_(signal_processing)

    The noise equivalent bandwidth (or equivalent noise bandwidth (enbw)) of a system of frequency response is the bandwidth of an ideal filter with rectangular frequency response centered on the system's central frequency that produces the same average power outgoing () when both systems are excited with a white noise source. The value of the ...

  4. Noise spectral density - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_spectral_density

    In communications, noise spectral density (NSD), noise power density, noise power spectral density, or simply noise density (N 0) is the power spectral density of noise or the noise power per unit of bandwidth. It has dimension of power over frequency, whose SI unit is watt per hertz (equivalent to watt-second or joule).

  5. Eb/N0 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eb/N0

    N is the total noise power in the bandwidth. This equation can be used to establish a bound on E b / N 0 {\displaystyle E_{b}/N_{0}} for any system that achieves reliable communication, by considering a gross bit rate R equal to the net bit rate I and therefore an average energy per bit of E b = S / R {\displaystyle E_{b}=S/R} , with noise ...

  6. Johnson–Nyquist noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnson–Nyquist_noise

    However, the combination of a resistor and a capacitor (an RC circuit, a common low-pass filter) has what is called kTC noise. The noise bandwidth of an RC circuit is =. [7] When this is substituted into the thermal noise equation, the result has an unusually simple form as the value of the resistance (R) drops out of the equation.

  7. Specific detectivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specific_detectivity

    Specific detectivity is given by =, where is the area of the photosensitive region of the detector, is the bandwidth, and NEP the noise equivalent power in units [W]. It is commonly expressed in Jones units ( c m ⋅ H z / W {\displaystyle cm\cdot {\sqrt {Hz}}/W} ) in honor of Robert Clark Jones who originally defined it.

  8. Noise (signal processing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_(signal_processing)

    Noise power; Noise figure; Noise-equivalent flux density, a measure of noise in astronomy; Noise floor; Noise margin, by how much a signal exceeds the noise level; Reference noise, a reference level for electronic noise; Noise spectral density, noise power per unit of bandwidth; Noise temperature; Effective input noise temperature

  9. Noise-equivalent power - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise-equivalent_power

    Noise-equivalent power (NEP) is a measure of the sensitivity of a photodetector or detector system. It is defined as the signal power that gives a signal-to-noise ratio of one in a one hertz output bandwidth. [1] An output bandwidth of one hertz is equivalent to half a second of integration time. [2] The units of NEP are watts per square root ...