Megajoules (MJ) to Ergs (erg) conversion

1 MJ = 10000000000000 ergergMJ
Formula
1 MJ = 10000000000000 erg

Understanding Megajoules to Ergs Conversion

The megajoule (MJ) is one million joules, the SI unit of energy used for fuels, electricity, and mechanical work at everyday scales. The erg is the CGS unit of energy, equal to 10710⁻⁷ joule — the work done by a force of one dyne over one centimetre. Converting MJ to ergs is useful when reconciling modern SI energy figures with older physics and astronomy literature that still uses CGS units.

Conversion Formula

1 MJ=1×1013 erg1\ \text{MJ} = 1 \times 10¹³\ \text{erg}

To convert Megajoules to Ergs, multiply by this factor:

erg=MJ×1×1013\text{erg} = \text{MJ} \times 1 \times 10¹³

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 Megajoules to Ergs.

erg=25×1×1013=2.5×1014 erg\text{erg} = 25 \times 1 \times 10¹³ = 2.5 \times 10¹⁴\ \text{erg}

How to Convert Megajoules to Ergs

Move SI energy in megajoules into CGS ergs with one power-of-ten factor.

  1. Note your MJ value: For example, start with 25 MJ.
  2. Multiply by the factor: Use 1×10131 \times 10¹³ ergs per megajoule.
  3. Read the result: 25×1013=2.5×101425 \times 10¹³ = 2.5 \times 10¹⁴ ergs.
  4. Expect a large number: Because an erg is very small, megajoule values become huge in ergs, here 2.5×10142.5 \times 10¹⁴ ergs.

Megajoules to Ergs conversion table

Megajoules (MJ)Ergs (erg)
00
110000000000000
220000000000000
330000000000000
440000000000000
550000000000000
660000000000000
770000000000000
880000000000000
990000000000000
10100000000000000
15150000000000000
20200000000000000
25250000000000000
30300000000000000
40400000000000000
50500000000000000
60600000000000000
70700000000000000
80800000000000000
90900000000000000
1001000000000000000
1501500000000000000
2002000000000000000
2502500000000000000
3003000000000000000
4004000000000000000
5005000000000000000
6006000000000000000
7007000000000000000
8008000000000000000
9009000000000000000
100010000000000000000
200020000000000000000
300030000000000000000
400040000000000000000
500050000000000000000
10000100000000000000000
25000250000000000000000
50000500000000000000000
1000001000000000000000000
2500002500000000000000000
5000005000000000000000000
100000010000000000000000000

What is Megajoules?

Megajoules (MJ) is a unit of energy in the International System of Units (SI). It is a multiple of the joule (J), the standard unit of energy, and is commonly used to measure large amounts of energy.

Understanding the Joule

Before diving into megajoules, it's important to understand the joule. One joule is defined as the amount of work done when a force of one newton displaces a mass one meter in the direction of the force. In simpler terms, it's the energy required to move something a small amount with a small force.

What Exactly is a Megajoule?

A megajoule (MJ) is equal to one million joules (1,000,000 J). The prefix "mega-" denotes a factor of 10610⁶. Therefore:

1MJ=1,000,000J=106J1 MJ = 1,000,000 J = 10⁶ J

This makes the megajoule a convenient unit for expressing energies that would otherwise be written with many zeros.

Formation and Derivation

The megajoule is a derived unit. This means it's formed from the base SI units: meter (m), kilogram (kg), and second (s). The joule itself is defined as:

1J=1kgm2s21 J = 1 kg \cdot \frac{m^2}{s^2}

Therefore, a megajoule can also be expressed as:

1MJ=106kgm2s21 MJ = 10⁶ kg \cdot \frac{m^2}{s^2}

Applications and Real-World Examples

Megajoules are used to quantify energy in various contexts:

  • Food Energy: The energy content of food is often listed in kilojoules (kJ) or megajoules (MJ). For example, a typical fast food meal might contain around 3-4 MJ of energy.
  • Explosives: The energy released by explosives is commonly measured in megajoules. For instance, one kilogram of TNT releases approximately 4.2 MJ of energy.
  • Electricity Consumption: Large energy consumers, such as industrial facilities, may measure their electricity consumption in megajoules or gigajoules (GJ).
  • Transportation: The energy content of fuels used in vehicles is often expressed in megajoules per unit volume or mass. The energy released when burning a gallon of gasoline is roughly 120 MJ.
  • Nuclear Reactions: The energy released by nuclear reactions, such as those occurring in nuclear power plants or nuclear weapons, can be extremely large and is often measured in terajoules (1TJ=1012J1 TJ = 10¹² J) or even petajoules (1PJ=1015J1 PJ = 10¹⁵ J). A gram of Uranium-235 can generate about 83.14 GJ of energy
  • Lightning: A single lightning bolt can contain around 1 MJ of energy.

Notable Associations

While there isn't a specific law or single person directly associated with the megajoule, it is a direct application of the principles of thermodynamics and energy measurement developed by many scientists over centuries, including James Prescott Joule (for whom the joule is named).

What is the Erg?

The erg is a unit of energy in the centimetre-gram-second (CGS) system, historically common in physics, astronomy, and mechanics before the SI joule became standard.

Definition

One erg is the work done by a force of one dyne acting over a distance of one centimetre:

1 erg=1.00000×107 J1\ \text{erg} = 1.00000 \times 10⁻⁷\ \text{J}

This equals exactly one ten-millionth of a joule (10⁻⁷ J), or equivalently 1 g·cm²/s². The erg is a small unit, reflecting the small base units of the CGS system.

Origin and History

The name comes from the Greek ergon, meaning "work." The unit was formally adopted by the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1873 as part of the CGS system and remained the dominant energy unit in physics literature well into the 20th century.

Law and Notable Facts

The erg has been largely superseded by the joule and is deprecated in the modern SI framework, but it persists in astrophysics, where luminosities and energies are still frequently quoted in ergs and erg per second.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • 1 joule equals 10 million ergs.
  • A mosquito in flight expends energy on the order of a few ergs per wingbeat.
  • The Sun radiates about 3.8 × 10³³ ergs every second, equivalent to 3.8 × 10²⁶ watts.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many ergs are in one megajoule?

One megajoule equals exactly 1×10131 \times 10¹³ ergs, since one joule is 10710⁷ ergs and a megajoule is 10610⁶ joules.

What is an erg?

An erg is the CGS unit of energy equal to 10710⁻⁷ joule, defined as the work done by one dyne of force acting over one centimetre.

How do I convert megajoules to ergs?

Multiply the megajoules by 1×10131 \times 10¹³. For example, 3 MJ equal 3×1013=3×10133 \times 10¹³ = 3 \times 10¹³ ergs.

How many megajoules equal one erg?

One erg is 1×10131 \times 10⁻¹³ megajoule, the reciprocal of the conversion factor.

Where are ergs still used?

Ergs appear in astrophysics and older physics texts, where energies of stars, explosions, and radiation are traditionally quoted in the CGS system.

Complete Megajoules conversion table

MJ
UnitResult
Watt-seconds (Ws)1000000 Ws
Watt-minutes (Wm)16666.67 Wm
Watt-hours (Wh)277.7778 Wh
Milliwatt-hours (mWh)277777.8 mWh
Kilowatt-hours (kWh)0.2777778 kWh
Megawatt-hours (MWh)0.0002777778 MWh
Gigawatt-hours (GWh)2.777778e-7 GWh
Joules (J)1000000 J
Kilojoules (kJ)1000 kJ
Gigajoules (GJ)0.001 GJ
British Thermal Units (IT) (BTU)947.8171 BTU
US Therms (thm)0.009480434 thm
Electronvolts (eV)6.241509e+24 eV
Ergs (erg)10000000000000 erg
Foot-pounds (ft-lbf)737562.1 ft-lbf
Tonnes of TNT (t-tnt)0.0002390057 t-tnt
calories (cal)239005.7 cal
Kilocalories (kcal)239.0057 kcal