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In every kind of dB, a factor of 10 in amplitude increase corresponds
to a 20 dB boost (increase by 20 dB):
and
, of course. A function
which is
proportional to
is said to ``fall off'' (or ``roll off'') at the
rate of
dB per decade. That is, for every factor of
in
(every ``decade''), the amplitude drops
dB.
Similarly, a factor of 2 in amplitude gain corresponds
to a 6 dB boost:
and

dB
A function
which is proportional to
is said to fall off
dB per octave. That is, for every factor of
in
(every ``octave''), the amplitude drops close to
dB. Thus, 6 dB
per octave is the same thing as 20 dB per decade.
A doubling of power corresponds to a 3 dB boost:
and

dB
Finally, note that the choice of reference merely determines a
vertical offset in the dB scale:
Specific DB Scales
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``Mathematics of the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT)'',
by Julius O. Smith III,
W3K Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9745607-0-7.
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Copyright © 2003-10-09 by Julius O. Smith III
Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA),
Stanford University
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