The ratio of the amplifier's output power (delivered to a Z0 load) to the input power (delivered from a Z0 source). Z0 is the characteristic impedance, in this case, 50W.
For small signal levels, the output power of the amplifier is proportional to the input power. Small signal gain is the gain in this linear region.
As the input power level increases and the amplifier approaches saturation, the output power reaches a limit and the gain drops. Large signal gain is the gain in this nonlinear region. See Gain Compression.
Gain FlatnessThe variation of the gain over the frequency range of the amplifier. See Small Signal Gain and Flatness.
Reverse IsolationThe measure of transmission from output to input. Similar to the gain measurement except the signal stimulus is applied to the output of the amplifier. See Reverse Isolation.
Gain Drift versus Time (temperature, bias)The maximum variation of gain as a function of time, with all other parameters held constant. Gain drift is also observed with respect to other parameter changes such as temperature, humidity or bias voltage.
Deviation from Linear PhaseThe amount of variation from a linear phase shift. Ideally, the phase shift through an amplifier is a linear function of frequency. See Deviation from Linear Phase.
Group DelayThe measure of the transit time through the amplifier as a function of frequency. A perfectly linear phase shift would have a constant rate of change with respect to frequency, yielding a constant group delay. See Group Delay.
Return Loss (SWR, r)The measure of the reflection mismatch at the input or output of the amplifier relative to the system Z0 characteristic impedance.
Complex ImpedanceComplex impedance (1+G). The amount of reflected energy from an amplifier is directly related to its impedance. Complex impedance consists of both a resistive and a reactive component. It is derived from the characteristic impedance of the system and the reflection coefficient. See Complex Impedance.
Gain CompressionAn amplifier has a region of linear gain where the gain is independent of input power level (small signal gain). As the power is increased to a level that causes the amplifier to saturate, the gain decreases.
Gain compression is determined by measuring the amplifier's 1 dB gain compression point (P 1dB ) which is the output power at which the gain drops 1 dB relative to the small signal gain. This is a common measure of an amplifier's power output capability. See Gain Compression.
AM-to-PM Conversion CoefficientThe amount of phase change generated in the output signal of an amplifier as a result of an amplitude change of the input signal.
The AM-to-PM conversion coefficient is expressed in units of degrees/dB at a given power level (usually P1dB, which is the 1 dB gain compression point). See AM-PM Conversion.
1.Small signal amplifier can be designed easily using s parameter while large signal amplifier not.
Question: Can a power amplifier amplify the power? An amplifier can amplify the voltage or the current. Power can be converted to heat.
A voltage amplifier does not have to supply significant current bur a power amplifier does.
No. In an amplifier, Power Out > Power in. In a transformer Power Out ~= Power In (minus internal losses). An AC generator is more like an amplifier than a transformer.
You can get amps for your guitar amplifier by purchasing and connecting a separate amplifier unit, also known as a power amplifier, to your existing guitar amplifier. This will allow you to increase the overall power and volume output of your guitar amplifier.
A power amplifier may also boost voltage; in audio equipment, power amplifiers often have a dial on the front that is used to control the input voltage gain. A simple power amplifier is composed of a single transistor; this type of configuration cannot provide voltage amplification as well. A voltage amplifier stage is needed. So the above example of an audio power amplifier is actually a voltage amplifier stage, followed by one or more power amplifier stages.
An amplifier will power your subwoofer so they can work.
the final stage of a power amp is a current amplifier in a bipolar design and a voltage amp in a FET design.
If an RF amplifier amplifies the incoming signal by 200 times, the power gain of the amplifier is +25.9 dB. Power is proportional to voltage squared, so the power gain is 400. The decibel scale is 3 times log2 of the power change.
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The answer to whether an RF power amplifier is useful for your home depends on the qualifty if your equipment. If your T.V. is getting a weak signal for example, an RF power amplifier may be useful to get a better signal.
Class B operated amplifier is used extensively for audio amplifiers that require high power outputs. Its also used as the driver and power amplifier stages of transmitters.