Biot to Megaampere
Bi
mA
Conversion History
| Conversion | Reuse | Delete |
|---|---|---|
1 Bi (Biot) → 0.00001 mA (Megaampere) Just now |
Quick Reference Table (Biot to Megaampere)
| Biot (Bi) | Megaampere (mA) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 0.000001 |
| 0.5 | 0.000005 |
| 1 | 0.00001 |
| 5 | 0.00005 |
| 10 | 0.0001 |
| 30 | 0.0003 |
| 100 | 0.001 |
About Biot (Bi)
The biot (Bi) equals exactly 10 amperes and is the base unit of electric current in the centimeter-gram-second electromagnetic (CGS-EMU) system. It is defined as the current in a pair of parallel conductors 1 cm apart that produces a force of 2 dynes per centimeter length — the CGS-EMU analogue of the SI ampere definition. In the CGS-EMU system the biot plays the same foundational role the ampere plays in SI: all other electromagnetic CGS-EMU units are derived from it. The biot is essentially obsolete in modern practice, but it appears in older physics literature and classical electrodynamics textbooks alongside the dyne, gauss, and oersted.
A current of 1 Bi equals 10 A — roughly the draw of a domestic electric kettle. References to the biot appear primarily in historical or theoretical contexts, not modern instrumentation.
Etymology: Named after Jean-Baptiste Biot (1774–1862), French physicist who, with Félix Savart, established the Biot–Savart law describing the magnetic field generated by a steady electric current.
About Megaampere (mA)
The megaampere (MA) equals one million amperes and occurs only in extreme natural events and large-scale research facilities. Tokamak fusion reactors drive plasma currents of 1–15 MA to achieve the magnetic confinement required for nuclear fusion. Pulsed-power facilities use megaampere-class discharges to compress metal liners, study shock physics, or drive Z-pinch plasmas — at these currents, magnetic forces are sufficient to crush metal cylinders in microseconds. The most energetic lightning superbolts are estimated to approach 1 MA. No engineered steady-state system produces megaampere currents continuously.
The Z Machine at Sandia National Laboratories discharges up to 26 MA. The ITER fusion reactor is designed to sustain plasma currents of about 15 MA.
Biot – Frequently Asked Questions
Why is the biot exactly 10 amperes and not some other factor?
The CGS-EMU system defines its base units using centimeters, grams, and seconds instead of meters, kilograms, and seconds. The factor of 10 falls out naturally from the dimensional conversion: 1 Bi produces 2 dyn/cm force between wires 1 cm apart, and working through the CGS-to-SI conversion yields exactly 10 A.
Who was Jean-Baptiste Biot and why does he have a current unit?
Biot was a French physicist (1774–1862) who co-discovered the Biot–Savart law in 1820, describing how electric current generates a magnetic field in space. This was one of the foundational results linking electricity to magnetism. The CGS community honored him by naming their electromagnetic current unit after him.
Does anyone still use the biot in modern physics?
Essentially no. Even theorists who prefer CGS units typically use Gaussian units rather than pure CGS-EMU. The biot appears mainly in textbook conversion tables, historical physics papers, and graduate-level electrodynamics courses that teach multiple unit systems for pedagogical reasons.
How do I convert between biots and amperes?
Multiply biots by 10 to get amperes; divide amperes by 10 to get biots. A 30 A circuit carries 3 Bi; a 0.5 Bi current is 5 A. It is one of the simplest unit conversions in physics — just move the decimal point one place.
What is the Biot-Savart law and how does it relate to the biot unit?
The Biot-Savart law calculates the magnetic field produced by a small segment of current-carrying wire at any point in space. In CGS-EMU, it uses biots for current and gauss for the field. In SI it uses amperes and teslas. The law itself is fundamental — it is used to design MRI magnets, motors, and particle accelerators.
Megaampere – Frequently Asked Questions
How does the Z Machine at Sandia produce 26 million amps?
The Z Machine stores energy in massive capacitor banks (about 22 MJ) then discharges it through a converging array of transmission lines into a tiny central target in roughly 100 nanoseconds. The extremely short pulse duration means the instantaneous current reaches 26 MA, but only for microseconds. The peak power briefly exceeds 80 TW — more than the entire world's electrical grid.
What does a megaampere of current do to matter?
At megaampere levels, the magnetic field generated by the current itself becomes an overwhelming force. In Z-pinch experiments, the current's own magnetic field crushes a metal cylinder inward at velocities exceeding 600 km/s, reaching pressures found inside giant planets. The material is compressed, heated to millions of degrees, and emits intense X-rays.
Why does a fusion reactor need megaamperes of plasma current?
In a tokamak, the plasma current generates a poloidal magnetic field that, combined with external toroidal fields, creates the helical field geometry needed to confine plasma at 150 million degrees C. ITER needs 15 MA to maintain this confinement long enough for deuterium-tritium fusion to produce net energy.
Could a lightning superbolt reach megaampere levels?
The most extreme positive lightning superbolts — occurring over oceans and detected by satellite — may briefly reach 0.5–1 MA peak current. These are extraordinarily rare, representing perhaps 1 in 1,000,000 lightning strokes. A typical bolt is "only" 20–30 kA, about 50 times weaker.
How do scientists measure megaampere currents?
Nobody puts a clamp meter around 26 MA. Instead, they use Rogowski coils (air-core toroids around the conductor) or B-dot probes that measure the rate of change of the magnetic field. The current is then calculated from Maxwell's equations. These sensors can respond in nanoseconds and survive the brutal electromagnetic environment.