Milligrays (mGy) to Rads (Rad) conversion

1 mGy = 0.1 RadRadmGy
Formula
1 mGy = 0.1 Rad

Understanding Milligrays to Rads Conversion

The milligray (mGy) is an SI unit of absorbed radiation dose equal to one-thousandth of a gray, and the rad is the traditional CGS unit of absorbed dose, defined so that one gray equals 100 rads. It follows that one milligray equals one-tenth of a rad. This conversion is common in health physics and radiation dosimetry when translating modern SI imaging or exposure figures into the rad values still referenced in older US documentation.

Conversion Formula

1 mGy=0.1 Rad1\ \text{mGy} = 0.1\ \text{Rad}

To convert Milligrays to Rads, multiply by this factor:

Rad=mGy×0.1\text{Rad} = \text{mGy} \times 0.1

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 Milligrays to Rads.

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

How to Convert Milligrays to Rads

Multiply by 0.1 to convert the SI milligray into the CGS rad.

  1. Identify the factor: one milligray equals 0.1 rads.
  2. Multiply the value: multiply the milligray figure by 0.1, equivalent to dividing by 10.
  3. Move the decimal: shifting the decimal one place left gives the rad value.
  4. Verify: 25 mGy equals 25×0.1=2.525 \times 0.1 = 2.5 rads.

Milligrays to Rads conversion table

Milligrays (mGy)Rads (Rad)
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 Milligray?

The milligray is a submultiple of the gray, the SI unit of absorbed radiation dose, equal to one-thousandth of a gray. It is the practical unit for the low doses encountered in medical imaging and everyday radiation exposure.

Definition

One milligray is 10⁻³ gray, i.e. one millijoule of radiation energy absorbed per kilogram of matter:

1 mGy=1.00000×103 J/kg1\ \text{mGy} = 1.00000\times10^{-3}\ \text{J/kg}

Since 1 Gy = 1 J/kg, the milligray equals 0.001 J/kg. In the older CGS system, 1 mGy = 0.1 rad, and 1000 mGy = 1 Gy = 100 rad.

Origin and History

The milligray takes its name from the British radiobiologist Louis Harold Gray (1905–1965) combined with the metric "milli-" prefix. The gray was adopted into the SI in 1975, and its milli-submultiple quickly became standard for reporting diagnostic-imaging doses.

Law and Notable Facts

As an SI-prefixed unit, the milligray is fully official. It dominates diagnostic radiology reporting because typical imaging doses fall in the single-to-tens-of-milligray range, keeping figures conveniently sized compared with fractions of a gray.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • 1 mGy = 0.001 Gy = 0.1 rad.
  • A chest X-ray delivers roughly 0.1 mGy; a CT scan delivers tens of mGy locally.
  • Average annual natural background dose is around 2–3 mGy.
  • 1000 mGy = 1 gray.

What is the Rad?

The rad (radiation absorbed dose) is a non-SI unit of absorbed radiation dose, quantifying the energy deposited by ionizing radiation per unit mass of matter. It was the standard dosimetry unit in health physics and radiology before the gray was adopted.

Definition

One rad equals 100 ergs of energy absorbed per gram of material, which is exactly one-hundredth of a gray:

1 Rad=0.0100000 Gy1\ \text{Rad} = 0.0100000\ \text{Gy}

Since the gray is defined as 1 Gy=1 J/kg1\ \text{Gy} = 1\ \text{J/kg}, one rad corresponds to an absorbed dose of 0.01 J/kg0.01\ \text{J/kg}, or equivalently 100 erg/g100\ \text{erg/g}. The rad measures physical energy deposition only and does not by itself account for the differing biological effectiveness of radiation types.

Origin and History

The rad was introduced in 1953 by the International Commission on Radiological Units and Measurements (ICRU) to standardize the measurement of absorbed dose across all types of ionizing radiation and all absorbing media. It replaced the earlier roentgen-based dose concepts, which were tied specifically to ionization in air.

Law and Notable Facts

The rad was superseded by the SI unit gray (Gy) in 1975, and its use has been progressively phased out internationally, though it remains common in the United States. Because 1 Gy = 100 rad, converting between the two is a simple factor-of-100 shift, a frequent source of dosimetry errors when the units are mixed.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

A typical chest X-ray delivers roughly 0.01 to 0.03 rad to the patient. A whole-body dose of about 400 rad (4 Gy) is the approximate median lethal dose (LD50) for humans without medical treatment. Therapeutic radiation for cancer often delivers total tumor doses of 5,000 to 7,000 rad (50 to 70 Gy), fractionated over many sessions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many rads are in one milligray?

One milligray equals 0.1 rads, since one full gray equals 100 rads and a milligray is a thousandth of a gray.

How many milligrays make one rad?

There are 10 milligrays in one rad.

What is the difference between the rad and the gray?

Both measure absorbed dose, but the gray is the SI unit equal to one joule per kilogram, while the rad is the older CGS unit equal to 0.01 gray.

Why convert milligrays to rads?

Legacy dosimeters, textbooks, and US regulatory materials often express absorbed dose in rads, so converting from milligrays lets you compare them with modern SI readings.

Is one rad a large radiation dose?

One rad (0.01 gray) is a modest dose in the context of imaging, but cumulative exposures are always assessed against safety limits by qualified radiation professionals.

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Complete Milligrays conversion table

mGy
UnitResult
Grays (Gy)0.001 Gy
Rads (Rad)0.1 Rad
Millirads (mRad)100 mRad