How to Convert Abohms to Nanoohms
To convert an electrical resistance measurement from abohms to nanoohms, multiply the resistance value by the conversion factor. Since one abohm is equal to 1 nanoohms, you can use this formula:
The resistance in nanoohms is equal to the abohms multiplied by 1.
Using the formula: nanoohms = abohms × 1
nanoohms = 5 abΩ × 1 = 5 nΩ
Therefore, 5 abohms equals 5 nanoohms.
How Many Nanoohms Are in a Abohm?
There are 1 nanoohms in one abohm.
What Is a Abohm?
The abohm (symbol: abΩ) is the unit of electrical resistance in the centimetre–gram–second electromagnetic (CGS-EMU) system of units. One abohm equals exactly 10−9 ohms (one nanoohm). The abohm is defined from the fundamental CGS-EMU electromagnetic relations. In the EMU system, the unit of current (abampere = 10 amperes) is defined in terms of the magnetic force between current-carrying conductors, and the other electrical units follow from this. The abohm is the ratio of one abvolt to one abampere. Because 1 abohm equals exactly 1 nanoohm, the abohm represents a very small resistance. The resistance of short lengths of thick copper wire, busbar joints, and superconductor connections at cryogenic temperatures falls in the abohm range. Like other CGS electromagnetic units, the abohm is primarily of historical and pedagogical interest. It was used in early electrical engineering and physics before the adoption of the international (later SI) system of units. Understanding the abohm and its relationship to the ohm helps in reading older scientific literature and understanding the development of electromagnetic unit systems. The relationship between abohm and statohm illustrates the role of the speed of light in connecting the ESU and EMU systems: 1 statΩ = c² abΩ (where c is in CGS units).
One abohm is equal to:
- 10−9 ohms (Ω) = 1 nanoohm
- 0.001 microohms (μΩ)
- 10−6 milliohms (mΩ)
- 10−12 kiloohms (kΩ)
- 1.1127 × 10−21 statohms (statΩ)
What Is a Nanoohm?
The nanoohm (symbol: nΩ) is a unit of electrical resistance equal to one billionth (10−9) of an ohm. The prefix “nano” denotes a factor of 10−9 in the International System of Units. Nanoohms are used to measure extremely small resistances encountered in superconductor research, high-current busbars, and precision metrology. The contact resistance of high-quality electrical connectors, the resistance of short lengths of heavy copper busbar, and the residual resistance of materials near absolute zero are all measured in nanoohms. In power engineering, the resistance of busbar joints and cable splices carrying thousands of amperes is critical for minimising energy losses and preventing overheating. A well-made bolted busbar joint should have a contact resistance below 100 nΩ. In superconductor research, true superconductors have zero DC resistance below their critical temperature, but practical measurements of “zero” resistance involve detecting resistances in the nanoohm range to confirm the superconducting state. Nanoohm-level measurements require specialised four-terminal (Kelvin) measurement techniques with high-current sources and sensitive nanovoltmeters to overcome thermoelectric and noise effects.
One nanoohm is equal to:
- 10−9 ohms (Ω)
- 0.001 microohms (μΩ)
- 10−6 milliohms (mΩ)
- 1 abohm (abΩ)
- 1.1127 × 10−21 statohms (statΩ)
Understanding Electrical Resistance Units
Electrical resistance is a measure of the opposition to the flow of electric current through a conductor. It is defined by Ohm’s law as the ratio of voltage to current (R = V/I). Resistance depends on the material’s resistivity, the length of the conductor, and its cross-sectional area (R = ρL/A).
Resistance converts electrical energy into heat, which is the basis of resistive heating in toasters, electric heaters, and incandescent light bulbs. In electronic circuits, resistors are used to control current flow, divide voltages, bias active components, and set time constants.
Major Resistance Unit Families
- SI units: The ohm (Ω) is the SI unit of resistance, with standard metric prefixes: nanoohm (nΩ = 10−9 Ω), microohm (μΩ = 10−6 Ω), milliohm (mΩ = 10−3 Ω), kiloohm (kΩ = 103 Ω), megaohm (MΩ = 106 Ω), and gigaohm (GΩ = 109 Ω).
- CGS-EMU unit: The abohm (abΩ) is the resistance unit in the electromagnetic CGS system. 1 abΩ = 10−9 Ω = 1 nΩ.
- CGS-ESU unit: The statohm (statΩ) is the resistance unit in the electrostatic CGS system. 1 statΩ ≈ 8.988 × 1011 Ω, an extremely large value reflecting the different scaling of ESU electrical quantities.
Resistance in Everyday Life
- Wiring: Household copper wiring has very low resistance (milliohms per metre) to minimise voltage drops and heating.
- Electronics: Resistors in circuits range from fractions of an ohm (current sense) to megaohms (high-impedance inputs).
- Insulation: Good electrical insulation has resistance in the megaohm to gigaohm range, preventing current leakage.
- Human body: Dry skin has a resistance of 10,000–100,000 Ω, but wet skin can be as low as 1,000 Ω, which is why water and electricity are dangerous together.
Converting Between Resistance Units
All resistance units measure the same physical quantity, so converting between them requires multiplying by the appropriate conversion factor. For SI prefixed units, each step is a factor of 1,000. The CGS units involve the speed of light constant for the statohm, while the abohm is simply 10−9 ohms.
Tips for Resistance Conversions
- For SI prefix conversions (nΩ, μΩ, mΩ, Ω, kΩ, MΩ, GΩ), each step is a factor of 1,000. So 1 kΩ = 1,000 Ω = 1,000,000 mΩ.
- The abohm is exactly equal to the nanoohm: 1 abΩ = 1 nΩ = 10−9 Ω. They’re interchangeable.
- The statohm is an enormous unit: 1 statΩ ≈ 899 GΩ. It is rarely used in modern practice.
- To convert ohms to kiloohms, divide by 1,000. To convert kiloohms to megaohms, divide by 1,000 again.
- Resistor colour codes and standard values (E-series) are always expressed in ohms. A “4.7k” resistor is 4,700 Ω = 4.7 kΩ.
- In schematics, resistance values are often shortened: 4k7 = 4.7 kΩ, 2M2 = 2.2 MΩ, 47R = 47 Ω.
- The relationship between statohm and abohm involves the speed of light squared: 1 statΩ = c² × 1 abΩ (in CGS units), or about 8.988 × 1020 abohms.
- When measuring very low resistances (milliohms and below), always use four-terminal (Kelvin) connections to eliminate lead resistance errors.
Abohms to Nanoohms Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from abohms to nanoohms.
| Abohms | Nanoohms (nΩ) |
|---|---|
| 1 abΩ | 1 |
| 2 abΩ | 2 |
| 3 abΩ | 3 |
| 4 abΩ | 4 |
| 5 abΩ | 5 |
| 6 abΩ | 6 |
| 7 abΩ | 7 |
| 8 abΩ | 8 |
| 9 abΩ | 9 |
| 10 abΩ | 10 |
| 11 abΩ | 11 |
| 12 abΩ | 12 |
| 13 abΩ | 13 |
| 14 abΩ | 14 |
| 15 abΩ | 15 |
| 16 abΩ | 16 |
| 17 abΩ | 17 |
| 18 abΩ | 18 |
| 19 abΩ | 19 |
| 20 abΩ | 20 |
| 21 abΩ | 21 |
| 22 abΩ | 22 |
| 23 abΩ | 23 |
| 24 abΩ | 24 |
| 25 abΩ | 25 |
| 26 abΩ | 26 |
| 27 abΩ | 27 |
| 28 abΩ | 28 |
| 29 abΩ | 29 |
| 30 abΩ | 30 |
| 31 abΩ | 31 |
| 32 abΩ | 32 |
| 33 abΩ | 33 |
| 34 abΩ | 34 |
| 35 abΩ | 35 |
| 36 abΩ | 36 |
| 37 abΩ | 37 |
| 38 abΩ | 38 |
| 39 abΩ | 39 |
| 40 abΩ | 40 |