To follow your math, then if I started at 150db and dropped down to 130db, it has decayed 99%?
Yes, of course the energy has dropped 99%. It does not matter what the initial level is, +20 dB is always 100 times the power, and -20dB is always 1/100 times the power. Decibel scale was invented to measure energy in log scale. Man we can have some different experiences and opinions, but you can't argue with math. Decibels measure energy, hearing has other measurement units like sones, phones, barks scale and ERBs. So decibels are not directly related to hearing, it's a unit for devices such as SPL meter and microphones. It correlates still well as a link between the hearing and measurements. Decibels are handy when the ratios are more important than absolute differences. I have given lectures in the university about these.
If you read your link carefully, it is talking about the reference level. In this case, it is the maximum level where your waterfall graphs starts. You can use percents just as decibels if you are talking about the relative difference compared to the initial (reference) level. Only thing that the link says is the simple fact that dB are relative measure, and cannot be used to describe absolute power (in absence of reference). It describes power ratios. In SPL readings, treshold of hearing is considered the reference power level 0dB, or pressure of 0.0002 pascal at 1000Hz.
So dropping to 110db is what 99.99%?
Bryan
Yes. Why don't you simply do the math and check it? Dropping 60 dB is always 99.9999% regardless of where you start. Definition for T(-60dB) was invented from the time it takes power to drop to one millionth. Dropping 110dB to 0dB would be in percents 100 x (1-10^(-11)) =99.999999999% attenuation.
And dropping from 150 to 110dB is 1/10000 time the initial power, so its 99.99%
I know decibels have to be recalled once in a while:
decibels = 20*log10(A/A_ref)
power ratio = 10^(decibels/10)
where A_ref is the reference level I mentioned
edit:
ratios to percents