Thanks, jiripolivka and FvM, for help!
Jiripolivka,
In frequency ranges above say 10 MHz it is not common to talk about "voltage gain" as the quantity we can measure is power. So the gain in dB is the same but we care for power, not voltage.
I am happy to know that. I want to ask more about this. Do you mean that in the frequency range we usually can only measure power not voltage? Why we don't measure voltage in this frequency range?
At your GPS frequency band, designing an amplifier with 50 dB or more gain is possible but in your block diagram the receiver gain is concentrated in the IF section where it is easier and cheaper to make high-gain amplifiers.
I has some intuitive about that but don't really know why. If possible, can you give me a link explanning this.
I have been said that the input signal going into antenna is about -140dBm and they said that RF amplifier has to have the gain at least 50dB to make sure that the signal going to ADC is about 0.3V.
If you put a high-gain RF amplifier just after the antenna, you must consider its linearity, and due to a high gain, also system vulnerability by external interference.
Thanks, this is good one. I will search more about this.
Designing such system needs some experience. The best way to learn it is to see how it is done by others, and why. Then you may improve the state of art, and present a better design.
Thanks for the advice. I thought about this but you know I have almost no experience about this and therefore the searching also get more difficult.
If you know any materials about this, please let me know.
To your point 2: We refer the impedance to the common 50 Ohms, used by the most test instruments
I don't get this point. Can you give me a link?
If you specify the RF input power level as -110 dBm, you should also know receiver NF and bandwidth. The noise floor of the receiver should be ~20 dB lower. You can use the equation or input noise power, Pn :
Pn = -174 + NF +10 log B where Pn is in dBm, NF in dB and B in Hertz.
Can you tell me how you get the formula?
FvM,
Due to limited selectivity of the RF filters, RF gain can't be arbitrarily high, otherwise off-band components could cause amplifier and mixer overload. So if you plan higher RF gain, you have to check that the signal is keeping the linear range in every part of the receiver.
Thanks I will check that now.
How can you know it is -110dBm not dB?
RF measurements are usually referred to 50 ohms.
I don't get this. If you know the link explanning this, please let me know.