Microvolts to Abvolts Converter

Convert microvolts to abvolts instantly with our free voltage conversion calculator. Enter any value for accurate results.

µV
=
abV
100
Abvolts (abV)
1 µV = 100 abV
🔄 Swap Units (Abvolts → Microvolts)
1 µV
=
100 abV
1 Microvolt = 100 Abvolts

How to Convert Microvolts to Abvolts

To convert a voltage measurement from microvolts to abvolts, multiply the voltage by the conversion factor. Since one microvolt is equal to 100 abvolts, you can use this formula:

abvolts = microvolts × 100

The voltage in abvolts is equal to the microvolts multiplied by 100.

Example: Convert 5 microvolts to abvolts.

Using the formula: abvolts = microvolts × 100

abvolts = 5 µV × 100 = 500 abV

Therefore, 5 microvolts equals 500 abvolts.

How Many Abvolts Are in a Microvolt?

There are 100 abvolts in one microvolt.

1 µV = 100 abV

What Is a Microvolt?

The microvolt (symbol: μV) is a unit of electric potential equal to one millionth (10−6) of a volt. The prefix “micro” denotes a factor of 10−6 in the International System of Units. Microvolts are important in biomedical instrumentation, audio engineering, and precision measurement. Electroencephalography (EEG) signals from the brain are typically 10–100 μV in amplitude. Electrocardiogram (ECG) signals from the heart range from about 100 μV to 3 mV. In audio engineering, the output of moving-coil phono cartridges is typically 0.2–0.5 mV (200–500 μV), requiring specialised phono preamplifiers. Microphone sensitivities are sometimes specified in microvolts per pascal. In electronics, the input offset voltage of precision operational amplifiers can be as low as 1–10 μV, and the noise floor of sensitive receivers is often measured in microvolts.

One microvolt is equal to:

  • 10−6 volts (V)
  • 1,000 nanovolts (nV)
  • 0.001 millivolts (mV)
  • 10−9 kilovolts (kV)
  • 3.3356 × 10−9 statvolts (stV)
  • 10,000 abvolts (abV)

What Is a Abvolt?

The abvolt (symbol: abV) is the unit of electric potential in the centimetre–gram–second (CGS) electromagnetic (EMU) system of units. One abvolt equals exactly 10−8 volts (10 nanovolts). The abvolt is an extremely small unit of voltage. It would take 100 million abvolts to equal one volt. The prefix “ab” in CGS electromagnetic units stands for “absolute,” referring to the absolute electromagnetic system developed in the 19th century. In the CGS-EMU system, the abvolt is defined as the potential difference across a conductor when a current of one abampere (= 10 A) dissipates one erg per second (= 10−7 W) of power. This definition parallels the SI definition of the volt but uses CGS base units. The abvolt is primarily of historical and theoretical interest today. It appears in older physics texts and in the study of electromagnetic unit systems. The relationship between the abvolt and the statvolt is: 1 statvolt = c2 × 10−8 abvolts ≈ 2.998 × 1010 abvolts, where c is the speed of light in cm/s.

One abvolt is equal to:

  • 10−8 volts (V)
  • 10−5 millivolts (mV)
  • 0.01 microvolts (μV)
  • 10 nanovolts (nV)
  • 3.3356 × 10−11 statvolts (stV)
  • 10−11 kilovolts (kV)

Understanding Voltage Units

Voltage (also called electric potential difference or electromotive force) is a measure of the work needed to move a unit electric charge from one point to another in an electric field. It is one of the most fundamental quantities in electricity and electronics, analogous to pressure in a water system.

Ohm’s law (V = I × R) relates voltage (V) to current (I) and resistance (R), and the power equation (P = V × I) connects voltage to electrical power. These relationships are the foundation of all electrical engineering.

Major Voltage Unit Systems

  • SI units (V with metric prefixes): The volt (V) is the SI derived unit of electric potential. Standard metric prefixes produce nanovolts (nV), microvolts (μV), millivolts (mV), kilovolts (kV), megavolts (MV), and gigavolts (GV). Each prefix step is a factor of 1,000.
  • CGS electrostatic unit — Statvolt (stV): The voltage unit in the Gaussian/ESU system. One statvolt equals exactly 299.792458 V, a factor derived from the speed of light. Used in some theoretical physics contexts.
  • CGS electromagnetic unit — Abvolt (abV): The voltage unit in the EMU system. One abvolt equals exactly 10−8 V (10 nanovolts). An extremely small unit, primarily of historical interest.

Voltage in Everyday Life

  • Batteries: AA/AAA cells = 1.5 V, 9 V battery, car battery = 12 V, smartphone = 3.7–4.2 V.
  • Household mains: 120 V (North America, Japan) or 230 V (Europe, Asia, Africa) at 50 or 60 Hz AC.
  • USB power: USB 2.0/3.0 = 5 V, USB-C PD = 5/9/15/20 V (up to 48 V in Extended Power Range).
  • Power transmission: 110–765 kV for long-distance lines, 4–35 kV for local distribution.
  • Lightning: 100–300 MV potential difference, 20,000–200,000 A peak current.
  • Static electricity: Walking on carpet can generate 1–25 kV.

Converting Between Voltage Units

SI voltage conversions follow simple powers of 10: each metric prefix step (nano → micro → milli → base → kilo → mega → giga) is a factor of 1,000. For CGS units, the key factors are: 1 stV = 299.792458 V (from the speed of light) and 1 abV = 10−8 V (exact).

Tips for Voltage Conversions

  • For SI prefix conversions (nV, μV, mV, V, kV, MV, GV), each step is a factor of 1,000. So 1 kV = 1,000 V = 1,000,000 mV, and 1 V = 1,000 mV = 1,000,000 μV.
  • The statvolt factor (299.792458 V) comes from the speed of light: c = 299,792,458 m/s, and 1 stV = c/(106) V. This is an exact value.
  • The abvolt is exactly 10 nanovolts (10−8 V). This is a very small voltage — it takes 100 million abvolts to make 1 volt.
  • The relationship between statvolts and abvolts involves c²: 1 stV = c² × 10−8 abV ≈ 2.998 × 1010 abV.
  • When dealing with very large or very small numbers, scientific notation is helpful: 1 GV = 109 V, and 1 nV = 10−9 V.
  • Don’t confuse voltage (electric potential, measured in volts) with current (charge flow, measured in amperes) or resistance (opposition to current, measured in ohms). Voltage “pushes” current through resistance.
  • In practice, kilovolts are the most common “large” voltage unit (power lines, X-rays), while millivolts and microvolts are common “small” units (sensors, biomedical signals).

Microvolts to Abvolts Conversion Table

The following table shows conversions from microvolts to abvolts.

MicrovoltsAbvolts (abV)
1 µV100
2 µV200
3 µV300
4 µV400
5 µV500
6 µV600
7 µV700
8 µV800
9 µV900
10 µV1,000
11 µV1,100
12 µV1,200
13 µV1,300
14 µV1,400
15 µV1,500
16 µV1,600
17 µV1,700
18 µV1,800
19 µV1,900
20 µV2,000
21 µV2,100
22 µV2,200
23 µV2,300
24 µV2,400
25 µV2,500
26 µV2,600
27 µV2,700
28 µV2,800
29 µV2,900
30 µV3,000
31 µV3,100
32 µV3,200
33 µV3,300
34 µV3,400
35 µV3,500
36 µV3,600
37 µV3,700
38 µV3,800
39 µV3,900
40 µV4,000

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