Minimum Detectable Signal (MDS) Calculator

dB

The Minimum Detectable Signal (MDS) Calculator estimates the smallest signal power level that a receiver can detect above the noise floor. MDS defines the sensitivity of a receiver system and depends on the noise figure, system temperature, and bandwidth.

Formula

MDS = 10 * log10( (k * T) / (1mW) ) + NF + 10 * log10(BW)

Constants & Units

  • k = Boltzmann constant = −228.6 dBW/(K·Hz)
  • T = Temperature in Kelvin (default = 290 K)
  • NF = Receiver noise figure (dB)
  • BW = Receiver bandwidth (Hz, MHz, or GHz)
  • MDS result = dBm

Explanation

  • MDS represents the minimum power level required for a receiver to distinguish a signal from noise.
  • It is also referred to as the “receiver sensitivity.”
  • Smaller (more negative) MDS indicates a more sensitive receiver.

Example

Input:

  • NF = 5 dB
  • T = 290 K
  • BW = 1 MHz

Step-by-step:

MDS = −228.6 + 5 + 10 * log10(1,000,000)
MDS = −228.6 + 5 + 60
MDS = −163.6 dBm

Output:

  • Minimum Detectable Signal (MDS) = −163.6 dBm

Use Cases

  • Evaluate receiver performance and noise floor.
  • Compare sensitivity between different RF receivers.
  • Optimize system design for weak-signal environments.