Decibels themselves are unitless — they describe ratios. To express an absolute power level in a dB-like scale, we reference to a fixed power.
- dBW: power referenced to : . So , , , .
- dBm: power referenced to : . So , , .
Conversion
Since , the conversion between dBW and dBm is
To convert from dBW to dBm, add 30. To convert from dBm to dBW, subtract 30. This is just .
A worked example
:
- .
- . Or via conversion: .
:
- .
- . Or via conversion: .
Gain to go from to :
- Linear: .
- .
Check: . And . Same gain, either way.
The pattern: a gain in dB is the difference of two power levels in either dBW or dBm. The result is the same.
Where these show up
- dBm is the standard in RF and microwave engineering. Receiver sensitivities are quoted in dBm, transmitter outputs in dBm, channel powers in dBm. is a convenient reference because it’s near typical mobile-phone receiver levels.
- dBW is more common in satellite communications and high-power applications where the levels are tens of watts to kilowatts.
What you cannot do
You cannot add or subtract dBm/dBW values to combine two physical powers at a junction:
Adding dBm values corresponds to multiplying powers, not adding them. To find the power at a combiner output in dBm, convert each input to linear (watts), add, then convert back. See the decibel rules for details.