Radio noise near in
frequency to a received radio signal (in the receiver's
passband)
interferes (radio frequency interference|) with the operation of the receiver's circuitry. The level of noise determines the maximum sensitivity and reception range of a radio receiver; if no noise were picked up with radio signals, even weak transmissions could be received at virtually any distance by making a radio receiver that had high enough
amplification, with low enough
internal-noise. The limiting noise source in a receiver depends on the frequency range in use: At frequencies below about 40 MHz but above about 20 MHz, nearby
radio frequency interference caused by human-made devices is the main issue, and
lightning in occasional storms that pass within line-of-sight of the
antenna.
Atmospheric noise is variably comparable to human-caused noise below 20 MHz, and particularly severe in the
mediumwave and
longwave bands, or
even lower frequencies; below about 200 kHz atmospheric noise typically dominates. With radio noise present, if a radio source is so weak and far away that the radio signal in the receiver has a lower amplitude than the average noise, the noise will drown out the signal. The level of noise in a communications circuit is measured by the
signal-to-noise ratio (, ), the ratio of the average amplitude of the signal voltage to the average amplitude of the noise voltage. When this ratio is below one (0
dB) the noise is greater than the signal, requiring special processing to recover the information, if that is even possible. == Atmospheric noise ==