Microsieverts (uSv) to Millirems (mrem) conversion

1 uSv = 0.1 mremmremuSv
Formula
1 uSv = 0.1 mrem

Understanding Microsieverts to Millirems Conversion

The microsievert (µSv) is one-millionth of a sievert, the SI unit of equivalent (and effective) radiation dose that weights absorbed energy by the biological harm of the radiation type. The millirem (mrem) is one-thousandth of a rem, the older CGS-era dose unit still widely used in the United States for occupational and medical exposure records. Converting µSv to mrem lets you compare readings from modern SI-calibrated dosimeters against U.S. regulatory limits and legacy survey data.

Conversion Formula

1 uSv=0.1 mrem1\ \text{uSv} = 0.1\ \text{mrem}

To convert Microsieverts to Millirems, multiply by this factor:

mrem=uSv×0.1\text{mrem} = \text{uSv} \times 0.1

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 Microsieverts to Millirems.

mrem=25×0.1=2.5 mrem\text{mrem} = 25 \times 0.1 = 2.5\ \text{mrem}

How to Convert Microsieverts to Millirems

Use the fixed factor between the SI microsievert and the U.S. customary millirem to convert any dose reading.

  1. Read the dose in microsieverts: Take the value from your dosimeter, for example 25 µSv.
  2. Apply the factor: Multiply by 0.1, because 1 µSv = 0.1 mrem.
  3. Calculate: 25 × 0.1 gives the equivalent millirem value.
  4. Report the result: 25 µSv equals 2.5 mrem.

Microsieverts to Millirems conversion table

Microsieverts (uSv)Millirems (mrem)
00
10.1
20.2
30.3
40.4
50.5
60.6
70.7
80.8
90.9
101
151.5
202
252.5
303
404
505
606
707
808
909
10010
15015
20020
25025
30030
40040
50050
60060
70070
80080
90090
1000100
2000200
3000300
4000400
5000500
100001000
250002500
500005000
10000010000
25000025000
50000050000
1000000100000

What is the Microsievert?

The microsievert is one-millionth of a sievert, the finest of the commonly used SI dose-equivalent units. It is used to quantify the small radiation exposures from individual medical procedures, background radiation over short periods, and readings from portable survey meters.

Definition

One microsievert equals one-millionth of a sievert, or one microjoule of tissue-weighted radiation energy per kilogram:

1 uSv=1.00000×106 J/kg1\ \text{uSv} = 1.00000 \times 10⁻⁶\ \text{J/kg}

Because the sievert is defined as 1 Sv=1 J/kg1\ \text{Sv} = 1\ \text{J/kg} of weighted dose, the microsievert corresponds to 106 J/kg10⁻⁶\ \text{J/kg}. One microsievert equals 0.1 millirem, and 1,000 microsieverts make one millisievert.

Origin and History

The microsievert is a decimal submultiple of the sievert, the SI dose-equivalent unit introduced in 1979 and named after Rolf Sievert. As personal dosimeters and electronic survey instruments grew sensitive enough to record minute exposures, the microsievert and the microsievert-per-hour dose rate became standard in radiation monitoring.

Law and Notable Facts

Environmental and workplace radiation monitors typically display readings in microsieverts per hour. Normal background dose rates fall around 0.1 to 0.3 microsieverts per hour, giving a convenient benchmark for detecting anomalies during radiation surveys.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

A dental X-ray delivers roughly 5 microsieverts, and a coast-to-coast US flight about 40 microsieverts. Eating one banana gives approximately 0.1 microsievert from its natural potassium-40. One millisievert equals 1,000 microsieverts.

What is the Millirem?

The millirem is a non-SI unit of dose equivalent (biologically effective radiation dose), equal to one-thousandth of a rem. It is still widely used in the United States for reporting occupational and environmental radiation exposure.

Definition

One millirem equals one one-thousandth of a rem, and one rem equals 0.01 sievert. In SI base terms of dose equivalent:

1 mrem=0.0000100000 Sv1\ \text{mrem} = 0.0000100000\ \text{Sv}

Equivalently, 1 mrem=10 μSv1\ \text{mrem} = 10\ \mu\text{Sv} and 1 rem=1000 mrem=0.01 Sv1\ \text{rem} = 1000\ \text{mrem} = 0.01\ \text{Sv}. The rem is derived from absorbed dose in rad multiplied by a radiation weighting factor, so 1 rem corresponds to a biological effect scaled from 1 rad (0.01 gray) of low-LET radiation.

Origin and History

The name "rem" is an acronym for "roentgen equivalent man," introduced in the mid-20th century to express radiation dose in terms of its biological impact rather than raw energy deposition. The millirem became the practical everyday subunit for the small doses encountered in medicine, industry, and background radiation.

Law and Notable Facts

The SI unit of dose equivalent is the sievert (Sv), which has been the international standard since 1979, but U.S. regulations from bodies such as the Nuclear Regulatory Commission still express limits in rem and millirem. The U.S. annual occupational whole-body dose limit is 5000 mrem (50 mSv).

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • Average annual background radiation in the U.S. is roughly 300 mrem (3 mSv) from natural sources.
  • A typical chest X-ray delivers about 10 mrem (0.1 mSv).
  • A cross-country flight in the U.S. adds roughly 2 to 5 mrem from cosmic radiation.
  • 100 mrem equals exactly 1 mSv, a convenient conversion checkpoint.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many millirems are in a microsievert?

One microsievert equals 0.1 millirem, since 1 sievert equals 100 rem and therefore 1 µSv equals 100 microrem, or 0.1 mrem.

How do I convert microsieverts to millirems?

Multiply the microsievert value by 0.1. For example, a 40 µSv chest X-ray reading equals 4 mrem.

How do I convert millirems back to microsieverts?

Multiply the millirem value by 10. So 5 mrem equals 50 µSv.

Why do U.S. reports still use millirems?

American radiation-safety regulations (NRC) and many older dosimetry records predate SI adoption, so exposures are logged in rem/mrem; converting from µSv aligns modern instrument output with those legacy limits.

Is a few millirems a dangerous dose?

No. A single 2.5 mrem exposure is tiny — comparable to a few days of natural background radiation, which averages roughly 300 mrem per year in the U.S.

Complete Microsieverts conversion table

uSv
UnitResult
Sieverts (Sv)0.000001 Sv
Millisieverts (mSv)0.001 mSv
Rems (rem)0.0001 rem
Millirems (mrem)0.1 mrem