Abhenries to Henries Conversion
Enter the electrical inductance in abhenries below to get the value converted to henries.
How to Convert Abhenries to Henries
To convert an abhenry measurement to a henry measurement, divide the electrical inductance by the conversion ratio.
Since one henry is equal to 1,000,000,000 abhenries, you can use this simple formula to convert:
The electrical inductance in henries is equal to the abhenries divided by 1,000,000,000.
Abhenries and henries are both units used to measure electrical inductance. Keep reading to learn more about each unit of measure.
Abhenries
One abhenry is equal to the inductance of a conductor in which there is one abvolt of electromotive force when the current through the conductor is increased by one abampere per second. One abhenry is equal to 1/1,000,000,000 of a henry.
The abhenry is a centimeter-gram-second (CGS) electromagnetic unit of electrical inductance. An abhenry is sometimes also referred to as an EMU. Abhenries can be abbreviated as abH; for example, 1 abhenry can be written as 1 abH.
Henries
One henry is equal to the inductance of a conductor in which there is one volt of electromotive force when the current through the conductor is increased by one ampere per second.[1]
The henry is the SI derived unit for electrical inductance in the metric system. Henries can be abbreviated as H; for example, 1 henry can be written as 1 H.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology recommends using "henries" as the plural form of the unit, however the usage of "henrys" is also common.[2]
Abhenry to Henry Conversion Table
Abhenries | Henries |
---|---|
1 abH | 0.000000001 H |
2 abH | 0.000000002 H |
3 abH | 0.000000003 H |
4 abH | 0.000000004 H |
5 abH | 0.000000005 H |
6 abH | 0.000000006 H |
7 abH | 0.000000007 H |
8 abH | 0.000000008 H |
9 abH | 0.000000009 H |
10 abH | 0.00000001 H |
100 abH | 0.0000001 H |
1,000 abH | 0.000001 H |
10,000 abH | 0.00001 H |
100,000 abH | 0.0001 H |
1,000,000 abH | 0.001 H |
10,000,000 abH | 0.01 H |
100,000,000 abH | 0.1 H |
1,000,000,000 abH | 1 H |
References
- International Bureau of Weights and Measures, The International System of Units, 9th Edition, 2019, https://www.bipm.org/documents/20126/41483022/SI-Brochure-9-EN.pdf
- Ambler Thompson and Barry N. Taylor, Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI), National Institute of Standards and Technology, https://physics.nist.gov/cuu/pdf/sp811.pdf