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Signal-to-Noise ratios are closely related to the concept of dynamic range. Where dynamic range measures the ratio between noise and the greatest un- distorted signal on a channel , SNR measures the ratio between noise and an arbitrary signal on the channel, not necessarily the most powerful signal possible. Because of this, measuring signal-to-noise ratios requires the selection of a representative or reference signal. In audio engineering, this reference signal is usually a sine wave, sounding a tone, at a recognized and standardized magnitude, such as 1.228 VRMS.
Often the signals being compared are electromagnetic in nature, though it is also possible to apply the term to sound and light stimuli.
Due to the definition of decibel the SNR gave the same result independent of the type of signal which is evaluated (power, current, voltage).
SNR is usually taken to indicate an average signal to noise ratio, as it is possible that (near) instantaneous signal to noise ratios will be considerably different.
The SNR in decibels is 20 times the base-10 logarithm of the amplitude ratio, or 10 times the logarithm of the power ratio. See decibel.
Higher signal to noise is better i.e. cleaner.
When using digital storage the number of bits of each value determines the signal-to-noise ratio. In this case the noise is the error signal caused by the quantisation of the signal, taking place in the analog to digital conversionIn electronics, an analog to digital converter (abbreviated ADC A/D or A to D is a device that converts continuous signals to discrete digital numbers. Typically, an ADC converts a voltage to a digital number. The digital to analog converter or DAC perfor. For n bit integers the dynamic range (DNR) is also determined. The formula is:
Each extra quantisation bit reduces the level of the quantisation noise by roughly 6 dB.
For floating point numbers, with n bits in the mantissa and m bits in the exponent:
SINAD: Abbreviation for signal-plus- noise-plus- distortion to noise-plus-distortion ratio.
Note: The SINAD is usually expressed in dB.
Source: from Federal Standard 1037C in support of MIL-STD-188
In common usage, "signal-to-noise ratio" describes the ratio of useful information to false or irrelevant information, for example in an online discussion forum .
The term has been used e.g. on Usenet, where off-topic posts and spam are regarded as "noise" that interferes with the "signal" of interesting discussion.
Many Internet users prefer moderated forums, for instance, because moderation can improve the SNR of a forum. The Wiki collaboration model addresses the same question in a different way, by granting every user the power to "moderate" content. The assumption is that a majority of users are motivated by belief in the project goals, which leads to improved SNR by making it easier to add "signal" than "noise".
Here's a slight caveat: Signal to noise has several different technical definitions but always refers to one concept in general: How much signal you have over some type of noise. The noise can originate in the detector that you are using to make your observation. It might also be a general "noise", e.g. a background that includes not only your detector but a physical background that is related to whatever it is you are measuring. It can be defined by using the logarithmic definition above, or it might be a simple ratio. It is a vague definition at best and pretty much always confusing.
The reader is advised to be sure in using the right formula for their specific application.