illustrating the concept of −3 dB bandwidth at a gain of approximately 0.707 In some contexts, the signal bandwidth in
hertz refers to the frequency range in which the signal's
spectral density (in W/Hz or V2/Hz) is nonzero or above a small threshold value. The threshold value is often defined relative to the maximum value, and is most commonly the , that is the point where the spectral density is half its maximum value (or the spectral amplitude, in \mathrm{V} or \mathrm{V/\sqrt{Hz}}, is 70.7% of its maximum). This figure, with a lower threshold value, can be used in calculations of the lowest sampling rate that will satisfy the
sampling theorem. The bandwidth is also used to denote
system bandwidth, for example in
filter or
communication channel systems. To say that a system has a certain bandwidth means that the system can process signals with that range of frequencies, or that the system reduces the bandwidth of a white noise input to that bandwidth. The 3 dB bandwidth of an
electronic filter or communication channel is the part of the system's frequency response that lies within 3 dB of the response at its peak, which, in the passband filter case, is typically at or near its
center frequency, and in the low-pass filter is at or near its
cutoff frequency. If the maximum gain is 0 dB, the 3 dB bandwidth is the frequency range where attenuation is less than 3 dB. 3 dB attenuation is also where power is half its maximum. This same
half-power gain convention is also used in
spectral width, and more generally for the extent of functions as
full width at half maximum (FWHM). In
electronic filter design, a filter specification may require that within the filter
passband, the gain is nominally 0 dB with a small variation, for example within the ±1 dB interval. In the
stopband(s), the required attenuation in decibels is above a certain level, for example >100 dB. In a
transition band the gain is not specified. In this case, the filter bandwidth corresponds to the passband width, which in this example is the 1 dB-bandwidth. If the filter shows amplitude ripple within the passband, the
x dB point refers to the point where the gain is
x dB below the nominal passband gain rather than
x dB below the maximum gain. In signal processing and
control theory the bandwidth is the frequency at which the
closed-loop system gain drops 3 dB below peak. In communication systems, in calculations of the
Shannon–Hartley channel capacity, bandwidth refers to the 3 dB-bandwidth. In calculations of the maximum
symbol rate, the
Nyquist sampling rate, and maximum bit rate according to the
Hartley's law, the bandwidth refers to the frequency range within which the gain is non-zero. The fact that in equivalent
baseband models of communication systems, the signal spectrum consists of both negative and positive frequencies, can lead to confusion about bandwidth since they are sometimes referred to only by the positive half, and one will occasionally see expressions such as B = 2W, where B is the total bandwidth (i.e. the maximum passband bandwidth of the carrier-modulated RF signal and the minimum passband bandwidth of the physical passband channel), and W is the positive bandwidth (the baseband bandwidth of the equivalent channel model). For instance, the baseband model of the signal would require a
low-pass filter with cutoff frequency of at least W to stay intact, and the physical passband channel would require a passband filter of at least B to stay intact. == Relative bandwidth ==