Power, root-power, and field quantities
A power quantity is a power or a quantity directly proportional to power, e.g., energy density, acoustic intensity, and luminous intensity. Energy quantities may also be labelled as power quantities in this context.
A root-power quantity is a quantity such as voltage, current, sound pressure, electric field strength, speed, or charge density, the square of which, in linear systems, is proportional to power. The term root-power quantity refers to the square root that relates these quantities to power. The term was introduced in ; it replaces and deprecates the term field quantity.
Implications
It is essential to know which category a measurement belongs to when using decibels for comparing the levels of such quantities. A change of one bel in the level corresponds to a 10× change in power, so when comparing power quantities x and y, the difference is defined to be 10×log10 decibel. With root-power quantities, however the difference is defined as 20×log10 dB.In the analysis of signals and systems using sinusoids, field quantities and root-power quantities may be complex-valued, as in the propagation constant.