bar (bar) to centimeters of mercury (cmHg) conversion

1 bar = 75.00616 cmHgcmHgbar
Formula
1 bar = 75.00616 cmHg

Understanding bar to centimeters of mercury Conversion

The bar is a metric pressure unit equal to exactly 100,000 pascals, close to average atmospheric pressure at sea level and widely used in meteorology and engineering. The centimeter of mercury (cmHg) expresses pressure as the height of a mercury column it can support, where one cmHg is the pressure exerted by a 1 cm column of mercury at 0 °C. This conversion appears in barometry, vacuum work, and physiology, where mercury-column readings remain a traditional reference.

Conversion Formula

1 bar=75.0062 cmHg1\ \text{bar} = 75.0062\ \text{cmHg}

To convert bar to centimeters of mercury, multiply by this factor:

cmHg=bar×75.00616\text{cmHg} = \text{bar} \times 75.00616

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 bar to centimeters of mercury.

cmHg=25×75.00616=1875.15 cmHg\text{cmHg} = 25 \times 75.00616 = 1875.15\ \text{cmHg}

How to Convert bar to centimeters of mercury

Translate a bar pressure into an equivalent mercury-column height in one step.

  1. Note the pressure in bar: Start with your value in bar.
  2. Multiply by 75.00616: This gives the equivalent mercury column in centimeters.
  3. Read the result in cmHg: The product is the pressure in centimeters of mercury.
  4. Worked result: For 25 bar, 25 × 75.00616 = 1875.15 cmHg.

bar to centimeters of mercury conversion table

bar (bar)centimeters of mercury (cmHg)
00
175.00616
2150.0123
3225.0185
4300.0246
5375.0308
6450.0369
7525.0431
8600.0493
9675.0554
10750.0616
151125.092
201500.123
251875.154
302250.185
403000.246
503750.308
604500.369
705250.431
806000.493
906750.554
1007500.616
15011250.92
20015001.23
25018751.54
30022501.85
40030002.46
50037503.08
60045003.69
70052504.31
80060004.93
90067505.54
100075006.16
2000150012.3
3000225018.5
4000300024.6
5000375030.8
10000750061.6
250001875154
500003750308
1000007500616
25000018751540
50000037503080
100000075006160

What is bar?

The bar is a metric unit of pressure, widely used in science, engineering, and industry. It's a convenient unit because it is close to standard atmospheric pressure on Earth. Below is detailed information about bar, it's origin, and some real-world examples.

Definition of Bar

The bar is defined as exactly 100,000100,000 Pascals (105Pa10⁵ Pa). The Pascal (Pa) is the SI unit of pressure, defined as one Newton per square meter (N/m2N/m^2). Therefore:

1bar=100,000Pa=105N/m21 \, bar = 100,000 \, Pa = 10⁵ \, N/m^2

Origin and History

The bar was introduced by British physicist Sir Napier Shaw in 1909. The goal was to have a unit of pressure that was close to atmospheric pressure but based on the metric system. The term "bar" comes from the Greek word "βάρος" (baros) meaning "weight."

Relation to Atmospheric Pressure

Standard atmospheric pressure at sea level is approximately 1.013251.01325 bar. Because of this proximity, the bar and millibar (1 mbar = 0.001 bar) are frequently used in meteorology to measure atmospheric pressure. Historically, meteorologists used millibars, but now the SI unit, the hectopascal (hPa), is also widely used (1 hPa = 1 mbar).

Real-World Examples and Applications

  • Tire Pressure: Car and bicycle tire pressures are often measured in bar or PSI (pounds per square inch). For example, a car tire might be inflated to 2.5 bar.
  • Weather Reports: Atmospheric pressure in weather reports can be given in millibars or hectopascals, where 1013.25 mbar is standard atmospheric pressure.
  • Scuba Diving: Divers often use bar to measure the pressure of compressed air in their tanks. A typical scuba tank might be filled to 200 bar.
  • Industrial Processes: Many industrial processes, such as hydraulic systems and pressure testing, use bar as a convenient unit of measurement.
  • Geology: Pressures deep within the Earth are often measured in kilobars (kbar), where 1 kbar = 1000 bar.
  • Vacuum: While bar is not commonly used for measuring high vacuum, it's relevant when discussing rough or backing vacuum levels. For high vacuum, units like Torr or Pascal are more typical.

Interesting Facts

  • The bar is a metric unit but not an SI unit. The SI unit for pressure is the Pascal (Pa).
  • The millibar (mbar) is commonly used in meteorology.
  • 1 bar is approximately equal to 0.987 atmospheres (atm).

What is the centimeter of mercury?

The centimeter of mercury (cmHg) is a unit of pressure equal to the pressure exerted by a one-centimeter-high column of mercury under standard conditions. It is a scaled-up form of the millimeter of mercury (torr) used in some scientific and industrial settings.

Definition

The conventional centimeter of mercury is based on a 1 cm column of mercury with a density of 13,595.1 kg/m³ under standard gravity (9.80665 m/s²):

1 cmHg=1333.22 Pa1\ \text{cmHg} = 1333.22\ \text{Pa}

Exactly, 1 cmHg = 1333.22387415 Pa, which is ten times the millimeter of mercury (1 mmHg ≈ 133.322 Pa). This equals 10 torr under the conventional definition.

Origin and History

The unit descends directly from Torricelli's mercury barometer of 1643, where atmospheric pressure was read as the height of a mercury column. Mercury's high density makes the column compact and easy to read. The conventional value fixes mercury's density (its value at 0 °C) and standard gravity so the unit is independent of temperature and location.

Law and Notable Facts

The centimeter of mercury is not an SI unit; the SI unit of pressure is the pascal. It relates to the standard atmosphere as 1 atm = 76 cmHg exactly (by the historical 760 mmHg definition). The millimeter of mercury (mmHg), essentially identical to the torr, remains standard in medicine for blood pressure.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • 1 cmHg = 10 mmHg (10 torr) ≈ 1.33322 kPa.
  • One standard atmosphere equals exactly 76 cmHg.
  • A blood pressure of 120/80 mmHg corresponds to 12/8 cmHg.
  • A vacuum of 5 cmHg absolute is about 6.7 kPa, roughly 93% below atmospheric pressure.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many centimeters of mercury equal one bar?

One bar equals about 75.0062 cmHg, so a pressure of one bar would support a mercury column roughly 75 cm tall.

What is the reverse conversion?

Multiply centimeters of mercury by about 0.01333224 to obtain bar.

How does cmHg relate to the more familiar mmHg?

One centimeter of mercury equals 10 millimeters of mercury (torr), so one bar is about 750.06 mmHg.

Where is the centimeter of mercury used?

It shows up in barometry, vacuum-system readings, and some physiology and industrial gauges that trace back to mercury-manometer measurements.

Is a bar the same as one atmosphere?

No. One bar is slightly less than one standard atmosphere (about 0.98692 atm), since an atmosphere is defined as 1.01325 bar.

Complete bar conversion table

bar
UnitResult
pascals (Pa)100000 Pa
kilopascals (kPa)100 kPa
megapascals (MPa)0.1 MPa
hectopascals (hPa)1000 hPa
millibar (mbar)1000 mbar
torr (torr)750.0617 torr
meters of water @ 4°C (mH2O)10.19716 mH2O
millimeters of mercury (mmHg)750.0616 mmHg
standard atmospheres (atm)0.9869233 atm
centimeters of water (cmH2O)1019.716 cmH2O
technical atmospheres (at)1.019716 at
centimeters of mercury (cmHg)75.00616 cmHg
pounds per square inch (psi)14.50377 psi
kilopound per square inch (ksi)0.01450377 ksi
Inches of mercury (inHg)29.52998 inHg