Kiloampere to CGS e.m. unit

kA

1 kA

CGS EMU

100 CGS EMU

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Quick Reference Table (Kiloampere to CGS e.m. unit)

Kiloampere (kA)CGS e.m. unit (CGS EMU)
1100
101,000
303,000
10010,000
20020,000
30030,000

About Kiloampere (kA)

The kiloampere (kA) equals one thousand amperes and appears where extremely high currents are generated or measured. A typical lightning bolt carries a peak current of 20–30 kA, though extreme strokes can exceed 200 kA. Industrial arc furnaces melting steel draw 50–100 kA through graphite electrodes. Aluminum electrolysis cells in smelters operate at 150–500 kA of continuous DC current per pot. Rail electromagnetic launchers pulse at hundreds of kiloamperes. Resistance spot welding uses 5–30 kA pulses lasting milliseconds to join metal sheets.

A typical lightning bolt peaks at 20–30 kA. Aluminum smelting cells run continuously at 150–300 kA of electrolysis current.

About CGS e.m. unit (CGS EMU)

The CGS electromagnetic unit (CGS e.m. unit) of current equals exactly 10 amperes, numerically identical to the biot and the EMU of current — all three are names for the same quantity within the CGS-EMU system. The term "CGS e.m. unit" is used explicitly when distinguishing the electromagnetic subsystem from the electrostatic (ESU) or Gaussian subsystems within CGS. In the CGS-EMU framework, resistance, capacitance, and inductance take unfamiliar dimensions compared to SI; the system is now of historical and theoretical interest only. Modern engineering and science universally use SI.

1 CGS e.m. unit = 10 A. A 100 A industrial busbar carries 10 CGS e.m. units. The designation appears only in pre-1960 electrical engineering literature.


Kiloampere – Frequently Asked Questions

A spot welder uses a large step-down transformer: high voltage at low current on the primary becomes very low voltage (1–2 V) at enormous current (5–30 kA) on the secondary. The copper electrode tips concentrate this current into a small spot, melting the metal in milliseconds. Total power is only 10–60 kW — it is the concentration that does the work.

A typical 14 AWG house wire rated for 15 A would vaporise almost instantly at 1 kA — the I²R heating would melt copper in milliseconds. Industrial busbars carrying kiloamperes are massive rectangular copper or aluminum bars, sometimes water-cooled, with cross-sections of 10–100 cm² to keep current density manageable.

A typical negative cloud-to-ground stroke peaks at 20–30 kA for about 1–2 microseconds. Positive lightning (rarer, about 5% of strikes) can exceed 300 kA. The total charge transferred is only 1–5 coulombs because the pulse is so brief — enormous current, tiny duration.

Aluminum oxide dissolved in molten cryolite at 960 degrees C requires direct electrolytic reduction to separate aluminum metal. Each smelting pot runs at 4–5 V but needs 150–500 kA because the electrochemical reaction requires massive charge transfer. A single smelter may consume 1–2 GW — as much as a small city.

Circuit breakers rated for 10–200 kA interrupting capacity use arc-quenching chambers to extinguish the plasma arc that forms when contacts open under fault current. High-rupture-capacity (HRC) fuses have sand-filled ceramic bodies that absorb the arc energy. Without these devices, a short circuit on a utility feed would weld everything in the panel into slag.

CGS e.m. unit – Frequently Asked Questions

The CGS e.m. unit of current (10 A) was inconveniently large for everyday lab work, while the CGS e.m. unit of resistance (the abohm, 10⁻⁹ Ω) was absurdly small. Physicists created "practical" units — the ampere, volt, and ohm — as decimal multiples that gave human-scale numbers. The ampere was set at 0.1 abampere. These practical units eventually became SI, while the "absolute" CGS units became historical footnotes.

In the 19th century, electricity and magnetism were treated as partially separate phenomena, leading to separate "natural" unit choices. The EMU system normalized magnetic permeability to 1; the ESU system normalized electric permittivity to 1; the Gaussian system mixed both. Once Maxwell unified electromagnetism, this fragmentation became unnecessary — but the systems persisted in literature for a century.

They introduced "practical" units — the ampere, volt, and ohm — as decimal multiples of CGS-EMU quantities. The ampere was defined as 0.1 abampere (CGS e.m. unit). This practical system eventually became SI, while the "absolute" CGS units faded. The factor of 10 was chosen for human-scale convenience.

The gauss (magnetic flux density, = 10⁻⁴ tesla) remains surprisingly common — refrigerator magnets are rated in gauss, and MRI field strengths are often quoted in both tesla and gauss. The oersted (magnetic field strength) appears in materials science. These CGS-EMU holdouts persist because their numerical values are more convenient for everyday magnets.

The SI was officially adopted in 1960, but the transition took decades. Most physics journals required SI by the 1970s, though astrophysics and plasma physics held onto Gaussian CGS into the 2000s. Some subfields never fully switched — you can still find new papers using gauss and oersted alongside tesla and A/m.

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