9 views

1 Answers

In electronics, an octave is a logarithmic unit for ratios between frequencies, with one octave corresponding to a doubling of frequency. For example, the frequency one octave above 40 Hz is 80 Hz. The term is derived from the Western musical scale where an octave is a doubling in frequency. Specification in terms of octaves is therefore common in audio electronics.

Along with the decade, it is a unit used to describe frequency bands or frequency ratios.

9 views

Related Questions

What is Gain (electronics)?
1 Answers 4 Views
What is Pseudo-octave?
1 Answers 7 Views