How to Convert Meters to Nanometers
To convert a length measurement from meters to nanometers, multiply the length value by the conversion factor. Since one meter is equal to 109 nanometers, you can use this formula:
The length in nanometers is equal to the meters multiplied by 109.
Using the formula: nanometers = meters × 109
nanometers = 10 m × 109 = 1.0000E+10 nm
Therefore, 10 meters equals 1.0000E+10 nanometers.
How Many Nanometers Are in a Meter?
There are 109 nanometers in one meter.
What Is a Meter?
The metre (symbol: m) is the base unit of length in the International System of Units (SI). Since 2019, it has been defined as the length of the path travelled by light in a vacuum during a time interval of 1/299,792,458 of a second, making it dependent on the exact value of the speed of light. The metre was originally defined in 1793 as one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole along a meridian through Paris. Various physical standards were used over the centuries before the current light-based definition was adopted in 1983. In everyday life, one metre is approximately the distance from the floor to a typical door handle, or about one long stride for an adult. It is used worldwide for measuring room dimensions, furniture sizes, fabric lengths, and human height (in many countries outside the US). The metre forms the basis for all other SI length units through decimal prefixes: the kilometre (1,000 m), centimetre (0.01 m), millimetre (0.001 m), micrometre (10−6 m), and nanometre (10−9 m).
One meter is equal to:
- 0.001 kilometres (km)
- 100 centimetres (cm)
- 1,000 millimetres (mm)
- 106 micrometres (μm)
- 109 nanometres (nm)
- 39.3701 inches (in)
- 3.28084 feet (ft)
- 1.09361 yards (yd)
What Is a Nanometer?
The nanometre (symbol: nm) is a metric unit of length equal to one billionth (10−9) of a metre, or one thousandth of a micrometre. The prefix “nano” denotes a factor of 10−9. The nanometre is the standard unit in nanotechnology, semiconductor physics, and optics. Modern computer processors are manufactured using processes measured in nanometres — current leading-edge technology uses 3–5 nm process nodes, with sub-2 nm processes under development. In optics, the wavelengths of visible light range from about 380 nm (violet) to 700 nm (red). Ultraviolet (UV) radiation has wavelengths of 10–380 nm, and infrared starts above 700 nm. These wavelength values define the colours we see and the properties of light-based technologies. In molecular science, atomic and molecular dimensions are typically in the nanometre range. A water molecule is about 0.275 nm wide, a DNA double helix is about 2 nm in diameter, and a typical protein is 5–50 nm. The spacing between atoms in a crystal lattice is typically 0.1–0.5 nm.
One nanometer is equal to:
- 10−9 metres (m)
- 0.001 micrometres (μm)
- 10−6 millimetres (mm)
- 10−7 centimetres (cm)
- 3.93701 × 10−8 inches (in)
Understanding Length Units
Length is one of the seven fundamental physical quantities in the International System of Units. It measures the distance between two points in space. Length is perhaps the most intuitive physical quantity, as we encounter measurements of distance and size constantly in everyday life.
Two major systems of length measurement are in common use worldwide: the metric system (used by most countries) and the US customary/Imperial system (used primarily in the United States, and partly in the United Kingdom).
The Metric System
The metric system is based on the metre, with larger and smaller units derived using decimal prefixes. This makes conversions within the metric system straightforward — simply move the decimal point:
- Kilometre (km): 1,000 metres — used for geographic distances and travel
- Metre (m): The base unit — used for room dimensions, human height, and general measurements
- Centimetre (cm): 0.01 metres — used for body measurements, small objects, and clothing sizes
- Millimetre (mm): 0.001 metres — used for engineering precision, rainfall, and small components
- Micrometre (μm): 10−6 metres — used for cell biology, thin films, and surface roughness
- Nanometre (nm): 10−9 metres — used for atoms, molecules, light wavelengths, and semiconductor features
The US Customary / Imperial System
The US customary system uses units based on historical definitions that were later standardised in terms of the metre:
- Mile (mi): 5,280 feet = 1,609.344 m — used for road distances in the US and UK
- Yard (yd): 3 feet = 0.9144 m — used in sports (football, golf) and fabric
- Foot (ft): 12 inches = 0.3048 m — used for height, altitude, and building dimensions
- Inch (in): 2.54 cm exactly — used for screen sizes, paper, and precision measurements
Key Conversion Relationships
The most important cross-system conversions to remember are:
- 1 inch = 2.54 cm (exact, by definition since 1959)
- 1 foot = 30.48 cm (exact)
- 1 yard = 0.9144 m (exact)
- 1 mile = 1.609344 km (exact)
All US customary length units are legally defined in terms of the metre, making all conversion factors between the two systems exact values with no rounding error.
Tips for Length Conversions
- Metric conversions only involve factors of 10. Each prefix step (nm → μm → mm → cm → m → km) changes by a specific power of 10.
- Inches to centimetres: Multiply by 2.54. This is the most commonly needed cross-system conversion.
- Feet to metres: Multiply by 0.3048, or approximately 0.3. For a quick estimate, multiply feet by 3 and move the decimal one place left.
- Miles to kilometres: Multiply by 1.609. A handy approximation: add 60% to the mile value (10 miles ≈ 16 km).
- Yards to metres: Multiply by 0.9144. Since 1 yard ≈ 0.914 m, yards and metres are roughly similar in size.
- Quick mental math: 1 metre ≈ 3 feet 3 inches. 1 km ≈ 0.6 miles. 100 km ≈ 62 miles.
- Interesting relationship: The Fibonacci sequence (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89...) closely approximates the mile-to-kilometre conversion. For example, 5 miles ≈ 8 km, 8 miles ≈ 13 km, 13 miles ≈ 21 km.
- For precision work: All inch/foot/yard/mile to metric conversions are exact values, so there is no rounding error when converting between systems.
Meters to Nanometers Conversion Table
The following table shows conversions from meters to nanometers.
| Meters | Nanometers (nm) |
|---|---|
| 1.0000E-8 m | 10 |
| 2.0000E-8 m | 20 |
| 3.0000E-8 m | 30 |
| 4.0000E-8 m | 40 |
| 5.0000E-8 m | 50 |
| 6.0000E-8 m | 60 |
| 7.0000E-8 m | 70 |
| 8.0000E-8 m | 80 |
| 9.0000E-8 m | 90 |
| 1.0000E-7 m | 100 |
| 2.0000E-7 m | 200 |
| 3.0000E-7 m | 300 |
| 4.0000E-7 m | 400 |
| 5.0000E-7 m | 500 |
| 6.0000E-7 m | 600 |
| 7.0000E-7 m | 700 |
| 8.0000E-7 m | 800 |
| 9.0000E-7 m | 900 |
| 1.0000E-6 m | 1,000 |
| 2.0000E-6 m | 2,000 |
| 3.0000E-6 m | 3,000 |
| 4.0000E-6 m | 4,000 |
| 5.0000E-6 m | 5,000 |
| 6.0000E-6 m | 6,000 |
| 7.0000E-6 m | 7,000 |
| 8.0000E-6 m | 8,000 |
| 9.0000E-6 m | 9,000 |
| 1.0000E-5 m | 10,000 |