⚡ erg to eV — Erg to Electron Volt Converter

Convert energy units — joules, kilowatt-hours, calories, BTU, electron volts and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 erg = 6.242e+11 eV
UnitNameValue
0.001 erg6.2422e+08 eV
0.01 erg6.2422e+09 eV
0.1 erg6.2422e+10 eV
1 erg6.2422e+11 eV
5 erg3.1211e+12 eV
10 erg6.2422e+12 eV
50 erg3.1211e+13 eV
100 erg6.2422e+13 eV
1000 erg6.2422e+14 eV

Quick Answer

Formula: Electron Volt = Erg × 6.242e+11

Multiply any erg value by 6.242e+11 to get electron volt.

Reverse: Erg = Electron Volt × 1.6020e-12

Worked Examples

1 erg
1 erg × 6.242e+11 = 6.242e+11 eV
Single unit reference.
10 erg
10 erg × 6.242e+11 = 6.2422e12 eV
10 units — small-scale energy reference.
100 erg
100 erg × 6.242e+11 = 6.2422e13 eV
100 units — medium-scale energy.
1000 erg
1000 erg × 6.242e+11 = 6.2422e14 eV
1,000 units — large-scale energy reference.

Erg to Electron Volt Conversion Table

Common erg values — factor: 1 erg = 6.242e+11 eV

Erg (erg)Electron Volt (eV)Context
1 erg6.242e+11 eV1 erg
100 erg6.242e+13 eV100 erg
1e+04 erg6.242e+15 eV1 mJ
1e+06 erg6.242e+17 eV100 mJ
1e+07 erg6.242e+18 eV1 J
1e+08 erg6.242e+19 eV10 J
1.000e+10 erg6.242e+21 eV1 kJ
1.000e+12 erg6.242e+23 eV100 kJ
1.000e+14 erg6.242e+25 eV10 MJ
1.000e+17 erg6.242e+28 eV1 GJ
1.000e+20 erg6.242e+31 eV100 GJ
1.000e+23 erg6.242e+34 eV10 TJ
1.000e+26 erg6.242e+37 eV1 PJ
1.000e+30 erg6.242e+41 eV1 EJ
1.000e+33 erg6.242e+44 eV1 ZJ

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 erg = 6.242e+11 eV. Memorize for instant estimates.

Rounded shortcut

Use 6.242e+11 as a quick mental multiplier.

Reverse check

Multiply result by 1.6020e-12 to recover the original erg value.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Particle Physicist

Works with beam energies, collision products, and mass-energy in eV.

Semiconductor Engineer

Designs band gap structures — silicon band gap is 1.12 eV.

X-ray Technician

Selects tube voltage in keV for optimal diagnostic X-ray imaging.

Photovoltaic Researcher

Optimizes solar cell efficiency based on photon energy in eV.

Nuclear Physicist

Calculates nuclear binding energies and decay Q-values in MeV.

Materials Scientist

Measures work function and ionization energy in electron volts.

Frequently Asked Questions

About Erg and Electron Volt

Erg (erg)

The erg is the unit of energy in the CGS (centimeter-gram-second) system, equal to exactly 10⁻⁷ joules. It was defined by the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1882 as the work done by a force of one dyne over one centimeter.

Ergs were widely used in 19th and early 20th century physics before SI standardization. They remain in use in astrophysics (stellar luminosities in erg/s) and some older scientific literature.

Interesting fact: The Sun radiates about 3.8 × 10³³ ergs per second. A mosquito in flight exerts about 100 ergs of energy per wingbeat. One joule = 10,000,000 ergs exactly.

Electron Volt (eV)

The electron volt (eV) is the energy gained by a single electron accelerating through a potential difference of one volt, equal to approximately 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ joules. It was formally adopted as a unit by the IEC in 1930.

Electron volts are the standard energy unit in atomic physics, particle physics, and semiconductor engineering. Chemical bond energies are a few eV; X-ray photons are kiloelectron volts (keV); particle accelerators measure GeV and TeV.

Interesting fact: The Large Hadron Collider accelerates protons to 6.8 TeV (6.8 × 10¹² eV). Visible light photons have energies of 1.8–3.1 eV. The rest mass energy of an electron is 511 keV.

About Erg to Electron Volt Conversion

Converting erg to electron volt is common across energy, nutrition, engineering, and science. Different sectors use different energy units — joules in physics, kcal in nutrition, kWh in electricity, and BTU in HVAC — making accurate conversion essential for cross-disciplinary work and international comparisons.

Quick reference: 5 erg = 3.1211e12 eV and 10 erg = 6.2422e12 eV. Reverse: 1 eV = 1.6020e-12 erg. Exact factor: 1 erg = 6.242e+11 eV.

All conversions use IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, accurate to at least 8 significant figures.