Gilbert to Nanoampere

Gi

1 Gi

nA

795,774,999.99999604699 nA

Conversion History

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1 Gi (Gilbert) → 795774999.99999604699 nA (Nanoampere)

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Quick Reference Table (Gilbert to Nanoampere)

Gilbert (Gi)Nanoampere (nA)
0.179,577,499.9999996047
0.5397,887,499.99999802349
1795,774,999.99999604699
21,591,549,999.99999209398
53,978,874,999.99998023494
107,957,749,999.99996046988
10079,577,499,999.99960469877

About Gilbert (Gi)

The gilbert (Gi) equals 10/(4π) amperes — approximately 0.7958 A — and is the CGS-EMU unit of magnetomotive force (MMF) rather than a general-purpose current unit. In magnetic circuit analysis, MMF drives magnetic flux through a reluctance, analogously to how voltage drives current through resistance. A single-turn coil carrying 1 Gi of MMF passes 0.7958 A. In SI, magnetomotive force is measured in ampere-turns (A·T). The gilbert is obsolete but historically significant in transformer design, relay engineering, and magnetic circuit analysis dating from the late 19th century through the 1960s.

A relay coil requiring 2 Gi of MMF to actuate needs about 1.6 A·turn in SI terms. Vintage transformer and relay datasheets from the 1940s–1960s often specify MMF in gilberts.

Etymology: Named after William Gilbert (1544–1603), English physician and natural philosopher who authored De Magnete (1600), the first systematic scientific study of magnetism and electricity, establishing that the Earth itself acts as a giant magnet.

About Nanoampere (nA)

The nanoampere (nA) equals one billionth of an ampere (10⁻⁹ A) and is used for the smallest measurable electrical currents in precision instrumentation and low-power electronics. Electrochemical biosensors detecting glucose or DNA generate signals in the nanoampere range; implantable devices are designed to draw only a few nanoamperes in sleep states to extend battery life by years. Junction leakage currents in CMOS transistors and reverse-bias diode currents are also measured in nanoamperes. In electrochemistry, nanoampere-resolution galvanostat equipment is standard for corrosion studies and thin-film deposition research.

A glucose biosensor strip draws approximately 100–500 nA during a measurement. A low-power microcontroller in deep sleep typically consumes 1–100 nA.


Gilbert – Frequently Asked Questions

The gilbert equals 10/(4π) amperes because the CGS-EMU system uses a different form of Ampere's law where the factor 4π appears explicitly rather than being absorbed into μ₀. This "unrationalised" form distributes 4π differently in the equations, producing the 1/(4π) factor when converting to SI's "rationalised" system.

MMF is the magnetic analogue of voltage — it drives flux through a magnetic circuit the way EMF drives current through an electrical circuit. For a coil, MMF = N × I (turns times current). A 100-turn coil carrying 1 A has 100 ampere-turns of MMF. In CGS, that same MMF would be about 125.7 gilberts.

Gilbert (1544–1603) was physician to Queen Elizabeth I and author of De Magnete (1600), the first true scientific investigation of magnetism. He demonstrated that Earth is a magnet, distinguished magnetic from electrostatic attraction, and coined the word "electricus." He did all this 87 years before Newton's Principia — a genuine pioneer of experimental science.

Practically nowhere in new designs. You might encounter gilberts in vintage relay and transformer datasheets from the 1940s–1960s, in older American and European magnetic component catalogs, or in classic electrical engineering textbooks. Any modern magnetic circuit analysis uses ampere-turns (A·T) for MMF.

Multiply gilberts by 10/(4π) ≈ 0.7958 to get ampere-turns. Wait — that is backwards. Multiply gilberts by 0.7958 to get amperes for a single-turn coil. For MMF conversion: 1 gilbert = 0.7958 ampere-turns. So a relay spec of 5 Gi needs about 4 ampere-turns to actuate — for instance, 4 turns at 1 A or 8 turns at 0.5 A.

Nanoampere – Frequently Asked Questions

Chip designers optimize deep-sleep modes to leak only 1–100 nA so a coin cell battery (225 mAh) can power the device for 5–10 years without replacement. Every nanoampere matters in IoT sensors deployed in remote locations where battery swaps are impractical or impossible.

Yes — picoammeters and source-measure units (SMUs) from Keithley or Keysight resolve currents down to 0.01 nA. The trick is shielding: at nanoampere levels, even humidity on a PCB trace or triboelectric effects from cable movement can introduce errors larger than the signal itself.

Individual ion channels in cell membranes pass about 2–10 picoamperes each, but clusters of channels in a patch-clamp experiment produce nanoampere signals. Electrochemical glucose sensors generate 50–500 nA proportional to blood sugar levels. Neural signal electrodes also detect nA-scale biocurrents.

At nanoampere levels, leakage through PCB substrates, capacitor dielectrics, and transistor junctions becomes significant. High-impedance analog circuits must use guarded traces, Teflon standoffs, and low-leakage components. A fingerprint on a circuit board can introduce 1–10 nA of leakage from moisture absorption.

One nanoampere is about 6.24 billion electrons per second (6.24 × 10⁹ e/s). That sounds like a lot, but it is literally a billionth of the electron flow in a one-ampere current. Counting individual electrons at this rate is the basis of quantum current standards being developed at national metrology labs.

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