Megahenries to Gigahenries Converter

Convert megahenries to gigahenries instantly with our free electrical inductance conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

MH
=
GH
0.001
Gigahenries (GH)
1 MH = 0.001 GH
🔄 Swap Units (Gigahenries → Megahenries)
1 MH
=
0.001 GH
1 Megahenry = 0.001 Gigahenries

How to Convert Megahenries to Gigahenries

To convert an inductance measurement from megahenries to gigahenries, divide the inductance value by the conversion factor. Since one megahenry is equal to 0.001 gigahenries, you can use this formula:

gigahenries = megahenries ÷ 1,000

The inductance in gigahenries is equal to the megahenries divided by 1,000.

Example: Convert 5 megahenries to gigahenries.

Using the formula: gigahenries = megahenries ÷ 1,000

gigahenries = 5 MH ÷ 1,000 = 0.005 GH

Therefore, 5 megahenries equals 0.005 gigahenries.

How Many Gigahenries Are in a Megahenry?

There are 0.001 gigahenries in one megahenry.

1 MH = 0.001 GH

What Is a Megahenry?

The megahenry (symbol: MH) is a unit of electrical inductance equal to one million (106) henries. The prefix “mega” denotes a factor of 106 in the International System of Units. The megahenry is an extremely large unit of inductance that has virtually no practical application in real-world electronics or electrical engineering. No physical inductor or coil achieves inductance values anywhere near one megahenry. This unit exists primarily for completeness within the metric prefix system and occasionally appears in theoretical calculations involving extremely large electromagnetic systems or in educational contexts to illustrate the range of possible inductance values. In geophysics, the effective inductance of very large-scale natural electromagnetic systems (such as the Earth’s magnetosphere interacting with solar wind currents) could theoretically be described using very large inductance values, though such descriptions are uncommon in practice.

One megahenry is equal to:

  • 106 henries (H)
  • 109 millihenries (mH)
  • 1012 microhenries (μH)
  • 1,000 kilohenries (kH)
  • 0.001 gigahenries (GH)

What Is a Gigahenry?

The gigahenry (symbol: GH) is a unit of electrical inductance equal to one billion (109) henries. The prefix “giga” denotes a factor of 109 in the International System of Units. The gigahenry is a purely theoretical unit that far exceeds any physically realisable inductance. It exists for completeness within the SI prefix system and serves no practical purpose in electronics or electrical engineering. To put this in perspective, even the largest superconducting magnets in particle physics (such as those at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider) have inductance values of only a few henries. A gigahenry would be approximately one billion times larger than the largest practical inductor ever built. In theoretical physics and cosmology, extremely large inductance values might arise in models of astrophysical electromagnetic phenomena, but these are typically expressed using other formulations rather than in gigahenries.

One gigahenry is equal to:

  • 109 henries (H)
  • 1012 millihenries (mH)
  • 106 kilohenries (kH)
  • 1,000 megahenries (MH)
  • 1018 abhenries (abH)

Understanding Electrical Inductance Units

Inductance is the property of an electrical conductor by which a change in current flowing through it induces an electromotive force (EMF) in the conductor itself (self-inductance) or in a nearby conductor (mutual inductance). It is one of the fundamental quantities in electromagnetism, along with resistance and capacitance.

The physical basis of inductance is Faraday’s law of electromagnetic induction: a changing magnetic field induces an electric field. When current flows through a conductor, it creates a magnetic field. If the current changes, the magnetic field changes, which induces a voltage that opposes the change in current (Lenz’s law). The ratio of the induced voltage to the rate of current change is the inductance.

Major Unit Families

  • SI units: The henry (H) is the SI unit of inductance, with standard metric prefixes: μH (microhenry, 10−6 H), mH (millihenry, 10−3 H), kH (kilohenry, 103 H), MH (megahenry, 106 H), GH (gigahenry, 109 H).
  • CGS-EMU: The abhenry (abH) is the inductance unit in the CGS electromagnetic system. 1 abH = 10−9 H = 1 nanohenry. It is a very small unit.
  • CGS-ESU: The stathenry (stH) is the inductance unit in the CGS electrostatic system. 1 stH ≈ 8.988 × 1011 H. It is an enormously large unit due to the factor of c² in the conversion.

Inductance in Practice

  • Electronic components: Chip inductors: 0.001–1,000 μH. Power inductors: 0.1–100 mH. Transformers: 0.01–100 H.
  • Parasitic inductance: PCB traces: ~1 nH/cm. IC bond wires: 1–5 nH. Through-hole vias: 0.5–2 nH.
  • Audio equipment: Speaker voice coils: 0.5–3 mH. Crossover network inductors: 0.1–10 mH.
  • Power systems: Large power transformers: 0.1–10 H. Reactor coils: 0.01–1 H.

Converting Between Inductance Units

All inductance units measure the same physical quantity, so converting between them is a matter of multiplying by the appropriate conversion factor. For SI prefix conversions, each step is a factor of 1,000. The CGS conversions involve fixed factors: 1 abH = 10−9 H (exact) and 1 stH = c² × 10−9 H (where c ≈ 2.998 × 1010 cm/s).

Tips for Inductance Conversions

  • For SI metric conversions (μH, mH, H, kH, MH, GH), each prefix step is a factor of 1,000.
  • The abhenry equals exactly 10−9 henries, which is the same as 1 nanohenry (nH). This makes conversion straightforward.
  • The stathenry is enormous: 1 stH ≈ 899 billion henries. The conversion factor involves the speed of light squared (c²).
  • The ratio of 1 stathenry to 1 abhenry is c² (in CGS units) ≈ 8.988 × 1020. This reflects the fundamental relationship between electrostatic and electromagnetic units.
  • Most practical electronic inductors have values between 0.01 μH and 100 mH. Very few components exceed 10 H.
  • When reading component datasheets, pay attention to whether the inductance is in μH, mH, or H. A factor-of-1,000 error can be catastrophic in circuit design.
  • In RF (radio frequency) circuits, inductance values are typically in the 0.1–100 μH range. In power electronics, they are typically 1–100 mH.

Megahenries to Gigahenries Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from megahenries to gigahenries.

MegahenriesGigahenries (GH)
1 MH0.001
2 MH0.002
3 MH0.003
4 MH0.004
5 MH0.005
6 MH0.006
7 MH0.007
8 MH0.008
9 MH0.009
10 MH0.01
11 MH0.011
12 MH0.012
13 MH0.013
14 MH0.014
15 MH0.015
16 MH0.016
17 MH0.017
18 MH0.018
19 MH0.019
20 MH0.02
21 MH0.021
22 MH0.022
23 MH0.023
24 MH0.024
25 MH0.025
26 MH0.026
27 MH0.027
28 MH0.028
29 MH0.029
30 MH0.03
31 MH0.031
32 MH0.032
33 MH0.033
34 MH0.034
35 MH0.035
36 MH0.036
37 MH0.037
38 MH0.038
39 MH0.039
40 MH0.04

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