shanmei
Advanced Member level 1
From the noise power perspective, the power of white noise is equal to KTB. Boltzmann's constant, T is the temperature, and B is the noise bandwidth.
To normalize it 50 ohms resistor, p=(Vrms)^2/R=KTB, so Vrms=sqrt(KTBR).
From the above equation, a larger bandwidth leads to a larger RMS noise.
However, from the bellowing figure, white noise is distributed among the frequency range. No matter within 1KHz or 1MHz band, the noise does not change a lot. Noise is equal regardless of the bandwith.
Could you please help to figure out? Thanks.
To normalize it 50 ohms resistor, p=(Vrms)^2/R=KTB, so Vrms=sqrt(KTBR).
From the above equation, a larger bandwidth leads to a larger RMS noise.
However, from the bellowing figure, white noise is distributed among the frequency range. No matter within 1KHz or 1MHz band, the noise does not change a lot. Noise is equal regardless of the bandwith.
Could you please help to figure out? Thanks.