Electronvolt to Erg Converter

Convert electronvolts to ergs with our free online energy converter.

Quick Answer

1 Electronvolt = 1.602177e-12 ergs

Formula: Electronvolt × conversion factor = Erg

Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.

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All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.

Last verified: December 2025Reviewed by: Sam Mathew, Software Engineer

Electronvolt to Erg Calculator

How to Use the Electronvolt to Erg Calculator:

  1. Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Electronvolt).
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How to Convert Electronvolt to Erg: Step-by-Step Guide

Converting Electronvolt to Erg involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.

Formula:

erg = eV × 1.60218e-12

Example Calculation:

1 eV = 1.602177e-12 erg

Disclaimer: For Reference Only

These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.

Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.

What is a Electronvolt and a Erg?

The electronvolt (symbol: eV) is a unit of energy defined as the amount of kinetic energy gained (or lost) by a single electron when it moves through an electric potential difference of exactly one volt in vacuum.

Fundamental Definition

Mathematical Expression:

1 eV = e × 1 V

Where:

  • e = elementary charge = 1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹ coulombs (exact, since 2019 SI redefinition)
  • V = volt (SI unit of electric potential)

Since 1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb (J/C), we have:

1 eV = (1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹ C) × (1 J/C) = 1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹ J

This value is now exact by definition following the 2019 SI redefinition.

Physical Interpretation

Imagine a single electron starting at rest:

  1. Place electron at negative terminal of a 1-volt battery
  2. Let electron accelerate to the positive terminal through the electric field
  3. Kinetic energy gained by the electron = 1 electronvolt

The electron's final velocity would be approximately 593 km/s (ignoring relativistic effects), with kinetic energy:

KE = ½mv² = 1 eV = 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ J

Common Prefixes and Multiples

Standard SI Prefixes:

  • meV (millielectronvolt) = 10⁻³ eV = 1.602 × 10⁻²² J (thermal energies, superconducting gaps)
  • eV (electronvolt) = 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ J (atomic physics, visible light)
  • keV (kiloelectronvolt) = 10³ eV = 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁶ J (X-rays, inner electrons)
  • MeV (megaelectronvolt) = 10⁶ eV = 1.602 × 10⁻¹³ J (nuclear physics, gamma rays)
  • GeV (gigaelectronvolt) = 10⁹ eV = 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁰ J (particle accelerators, rest masses)
  • TeV (teraelectronvolt) = 10¹² eV = 1.602 × 10⁻⁷ J (LHC, highest-energy physics)
  • PeV (petaelectronvolt) = 10¹⁵ eV = 0.1602 J (cosmic rays, ultra-high-energy astrophysics)

Electronvolt as Unit of Mass (E=mc²)

Through Einstein's mass-energy equivalence E = mc², the electronvolt can express mass:

Mass Unit: eV/c² (electronvolt divided by speed of light squared)

Conversion:

1 eV/c² = 1.782661921 × 10⁻³⁶ kg

Examples:

  • Electron mass: me = 510.9989 keV/c² = 9.109 × 10⁻³¹ kg
  • Proton mass: mp = 938.2720 MeV/c² = 1.673 × 10⁻²⁷ kg
  • Neutron mass: mn = 939.5654 MeV/c² = 1.675 × 10⁻²⁷ kg
  • Higgs boson mass: mH ≈ 125 GeV/c² (discovered 2012, CERN LHC)

Particle physicists routinely express masses in MeV/c² or GeV/c², often abbreviated to just MeV or GeV when context is clear.

1 erg = 0.0000001 joules (J)

Note: The Electronvolt is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Erg belongs to the imperial/US customary system.

History of the Electronvolt and Erg

The electronvolt's development parallels the history of atomic and nuclear physics in the early 20th century.

Pre-History: Early Electron Research (1897-1920s)

1897: J.J. Thomson discovers the electron using cathode ray tubes, observing electrons accelerated through electric potentials of hundreds of volts.

1909-1913: Robert Millikan's oil drop experiment precisely measures the elementary charge: e ≈ 1.6 × 10⁻¹⁹ C.

1913: Niels Bohr's model of the hydrogen atom calculates ionization energy as 13.6 eV (though he expressed it in ergs or joules).

1920s: Early atomic spectroscopy and quantum mechanics developments naturally worked with energies on the eV scale, though researchers still used CGS units (ergs) or SI joules.

Formalization (1930s-1940s)

Early 1930s: The term "electronvolt" begins appearing in physics literature as particle accelerators (cyclotrons, Van de Graaff generators) accelerate particles through kilovolt and megavolt potentials.

Key Motivation:

  • Expressing X-ray energies: 10-100 keV far more intuitive than 10⁻¹⁵ to 10⁻¹⁴ J
  • Nuclear reaction energies: Alpha particles with 5 MeV vs. 8 × 10⁻¹³ J
  • Particle accelerator beam energies: 1 MeV proton beam vs. 1.6 × 10⁻¹³ J

1932: Carl Anderson discovers the positron (antimatter electron) in cosmic rays, with energies described in MeV.

1930s-1940s: Manhattan Project and nuclear weapons research standardized MeV for nuclear fission and fusion energies.

Post-War Standardization (1950s-1960s)

1948: 9th CGPM (General Conference on Weights and Measures) defines the ampere, indirectly fixing the volt and thus the electronvolt's joule equivalent.

1950s-1960s: Particle physics accelerators (synchrotrons, bevatrons) reach GeV energies:

  • Brookhaven Cosmotron (1952): 3 GeV
  • Berkeley Bevatron (1954): 6 GeV (first antiproton production)
  • CERN Proton Synchrotron (1959): 28 GeV

Standard Practice: By the 1960s, eV/keV/MeV/GeV were universally adopted in atomic, nuclear, and particle physics.

Modern Era (1970s-Present)

1970s-1980s: TeV-scale energies anticipated and achieved:

  • Fermilab Tevatron (1983): 1.96 TeV proton-antiproton collisions

2008-Present: CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC):

  • Design energy: 14 TeV (7 TeV per beam)
  • Higgs boson discovery (2012): 125 GeV/c² mass
  • Current: 13.6 TeV collision energy (2022-2025 Run 3)

2019 SI Redefinition:

  • Elementary charge e defined exactly: 1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹ C
  • Makes 1 eV = 1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹ J exact by definition
  • Electronvolt recognized in SI Brochure as accepted non-SI unit

Beyond Accelerators:

  • Semiconductor physics: Band gaps measured in eV (Si: 1.1 eV, GaN: 3.4 eV)
  • Photovoltaics: Solar cell efficiency tied to band gap energies (1.1-1.7 eV optimal)
  • Astronomy: Cosmic ray energies up to 10²⁰ eV (Oh-My-God particle, 1991)

Common Uses and Applications: electronvolts vs ergs

Explore the typical applications for both Electronvolt (imperial/US) and Erg (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.

Common Uses for electronvolts

Atomic and Molecular Physics

Scientists use eV to describe:

  • Ionization energies: Energy required to remove electrons from atoms
  • Electron affinity: Energy released when electron attaches to atom
  • Molecular orbital energies: HOMO-LUMO gaps, band structures
  • Spectroscopy: Photon energies in UV-vis spectroscopy (200-800 nm ≈ 6-1.5 eV)

Example: UV photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS) measures electron binding energies from 0-50 eV.

Nuclear and Particle Physics

The electronvolt (especially MeV, GeV, TeV) is the universal energy unit:

Particle Accelerators:

  • Beam energies: "The LHC collides protons at 6.8 TeV per beam"
  • Collision center-of-mass energy: √s = 13.6 TeV

Nuclear Reactions:

  • Q-values: Energy released/absorbed (e.g., D-T fusion Q = 17.6 MeV)
  • Decay energies: Alpha, beta, gamma emissions

Particle Properties:

  • Rest masses: Particle Data Group lists masses in MeV/c² or GeV/c²
  • Decay channels: Energy distributions of decay products

Semiconductor Device Physics

Band gap energies determine electronic and optical properties:

Applications:

  • Solar cells: Optimal band gap ~1.3-1.5 eV for maximum efficiency under solar spectrum
  • LEDs: Emission color determined by band gap (red ~1.8 eV, blue ~3.1 eV)
  • Transistors: Threshold voltages and switching energies
  • Detectors: Ionization energies for particle detection (Si: 3.6 eV per electron-hole pair)

Radiation Dosimetry and Medical Physics

X-ray and gamma-ray energies specified in keV or MeV:

Medical Imaging:

  • Mammography: 25-35 keV (soft tissue contrast)
  • CT scans: 80-140 keV
  • PET scans: 511 keV (positron-electron annihilation photons)

Radiation Therapy:

  • External beam: 6-18 MeV photon beams
  • Proton therapy: 70-250 MeV proton beams

Astrophysics and Cosmology

Photon energies across the electromagnetic spectrum:

Radio to Infrared: μeV to eV (microwave background ~0.0002 eV) Visible: 1.8-3.1 eV X-ray: keV to MeV (neutron star accretion, supernovae) Gamma-ray: MeV to GeV (active galactic nuclei, gamma-ray bursts) Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays: EeV (10¹⁸ eV) and beyond

Example: Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope detects photons from 20 MeV to >300 GeV.

Materials Science and Catalysis

Surface science and chemical reactions:

Techniques:

  • XPS (X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy): Binding energies 0-1500 eV
  • UPS (UV Photoelectron Spectroscopy): Valence band energies 0-50 eV
  • Auger Electron Spectroscopy: Electron energies 50-2000 eV

Catalysis:

  • Activation barriers: 0.1-3 eV for chemical reactions
  • Adsorption energies: 0.5-5 eV for molecules on surfaces

When to Use ergs

Used in physics, engineering, energy systems, and scientific calculations where this energy scale is appropriate for the application.

Additional Unit Information

About Electronvolt (eV)

How do I convert eV to joules?

Formula: Joules = eV × 1.602176634 × 10⁻¹⁹

Example: 5 eV to joules

  • 5 × 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ = 8.01 × 10⁻¹⁹ J

Reverse (joules to eV): eV = J / (1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹)

What is an electronvolt in simple terms?

An electronvolt is the tiny amount of energy that one electron gains when it "falls" through an electric potential difference of one volt, similar to a ball rolling down a one-meter hill gaining gravitational potential energy.

Analogy: Imagine a tiny charged particle (electron) on a "voltage hill." Rolling it down a 1-volt slope gives it 1 eV of energy.

Why use electronvolts instead of joules?

Convenience: Atomic and subatomic energies are incredibly small in joules, making eV more practical:

  • Hydrogen ionization: 13.6 eV vs. 2.18 × 10⁻¹⁸ J
  • LHC collision: 13 TeV vs. 2.1 × 10⁻⁶ J
  • Higgs boson mass: 125 GeV/c² vs. 2.2 × 10⁻²⁵ kg

Natural scale: The electronvolt matches the energy scales in atomic/nuclear/particle physics, just as kilometers are more natural than microinches for geography.

How is energy related to wavelength in eV?

Formula: E (eV) ≈ 1240 / λ (nm)

Precise formula: E = hc/λ = (1239.84193 eV·nm) / λ (nm)

Where:

  • h = Planck's constant = 4.136 × 10⁻¹⁵ eV·s
  • c = speed of light = 3 × 10⁸ m/s

Examples:

  • Red light (620 nm): E = 1240 / 620 = 2.0 eV
  • Blue light (400 nm): E = 1240 / 400 = 3.1 eV
  • X-ray (0.1 nm): E = 1240 / 0.1 = 12,400 eV = 12.4 keV

What is the difference between eV and eV/c²?

  • eV = unit of energy
  • eV/c² = unit of mass (through E=mc²)

Example:

  • Photon energy: 2 eV (pure energy, massless particle)
  • Electron rest mass: 511 keV/c² (intrinsic mass)
  • When electron at rest, its rest energy E₀ = mc² = 511 keV

Why divide by c²? To convert from energy units (eV) to mass units, divide by c² = (3 × 10⁸ m/s)².

How many eV in visible light?

Visible spectrum: approximately 1.8 eV (red) to 3.1 eV (violet)

Detailed breakdown:

  • Red (700 nm): 1.77 eV
  • Orange (620 nm): 2.00 eV
  • Yellow (580 nm): 2.14 eV
  • Green (520 nm): 2.38 eV
  • Blue (470 nm): 2.64 eV
  • Violet (400 nm): 3.10 eV

Why this range? Human eye evolved to detect solar spectrum peak output (~500 nm, 2.5 eV).

What is a kiloelectronvolt (keV)?

1 keV = 1,000 eV = 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁶ J

Typical applications:

  • X-ray energies: 10-100 keV (medical, industrial)
  • Inner-shell electron binding energies: 0.1-100 keV
  • Low-energy nuclear transitions: 1-1000 keV
  • Electron microscope beam energies: 100-300 keV

What is the energy of thermal motion at room temperature?

Room temperature (T = 300 K): kBT ≈ 0.026 eV = 26 meV (millielectronvolts)

Where:

  • kB = Boltzmann constant = 8.617 × 10⁻⁵ eV/K
  • T = absolute temperature in kelvins

Significance:

  • Explains why chemical bonds (1-10 eV) don't spontaneously break at room temperature
  • Thermal energy << bond energy, so molecular stability maintained
  • Important for semiconductor physics: band gap >> kBT for good insulator

How much energy is in a MeV?

1 MeV (megaelectronvolt) = 1,000,000 eV = 1.602 × 10⁻¹³ J

Typical MeV-scale phenomena:

  • Nuclear binding energies: ~8 MeV per nucleon
  • Gamma rays: 0.1-10 MeV
  • Positron-electron annihilation: 2 × 0.511 = 1.022 MeV (two 511 keV photons)
  • Alpha particle decay energies: 4-9 MeV
  • Nuclear fission fragments: 50-200 MeV

What is the Higgs boson mass in eV?

Higgs boson mass: mH ≈ 125.1 GeV/c²

Discovered at CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) on July 4, 2012.

Context:

  • About 133 times heavier than a proton (938 MeV/c²)
  • Equivalent to approximately 133 hydrogen atoms in mass
  • In kilograms: 2.24 × 10⁻²⁵ kg (incredibly tiny, but "heavy" for elementary particles)

The Higgs boson's mass is crucial to understanding the Higgs mechanism, which gives fundamental particles their mass through interaction with the Higgs field.

Can you use eV for macroscopic energies?

Technically yes, but impractical:

Examples:

  • 1 joule = 6.242 × 10¹⁸ eV (6 billion billion eV!)
  • 1 kilowatt-hour (kWh) = 3.6 × 10⁶ J = 2.25 × 10²⁵ eV
  • AA battery (3 Wh) = 6.75 × 10²² eV

Why not used: Numbers become absurdly large. The electronvolt is designed for atomic/molecular/nuclear scales, not everyday human-scale energies.

Exception: Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays occasionally reach macroscopic energies:

  • Oh-My-God particle (1991): 3 × 10²⁰ eV ≈ 51 joules (energy of baseball at 100 km/h)

About Erg (erg)

How do I convert erg to joules?

Formula: J = erg × 0.0000001

Erg to Joules converter →

How do I convert erg to kWh?

To convert to kilowatt-hours, first convert to joules, then divide by 3,600,000.

Erg to kWh converter →

What is Erg used for?

Erg is used in contexts where the energy scale makes it convenient compared to very large or very small joule values. It provides a practical measurement unit for specific applications.

Conversion Table: Electronvolt to Erg

Electronvolt (eV)Erg (erg)
0.50
10
1.50
20
50
100
250
500
1000
2500
5000
1,0000

People Also Ask

How do I convert Electronvolt to Erg?

To convert Electronvolt to Erg, enter the value in Electronvolt in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our energy converter page to convert between other units in this category.

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What is the conversion factor from Electronvolt to Erg?

The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Electronvolt and Erg. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.

Can I convert Erg back to Electronvolt?

Yes! You can easily convert Erg back to Electronvolt by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Erg to Electronvolt converter page. You can also explore other energy conversions on our category page.

Learn more →

What are common uses for Electronvolt and Erg?

Electronvolt and Erg are both standard units used in energy measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our energy converter for more conversion options.

For more energy conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.

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Verified Against Authority Standards

All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.

NIST Reference on Constants, Units and Uncertainty

National Institute of Standards and TechnologyFundamental physical constants and unit conversions

BIPM SI Units

Bureau International des Poids et MesuresInternational System of Units (SI) definitions and standards

ISO 80000

International Organization for StandardizationQuantities and units international standards series

Last verified: December 3, 2025