Please support this site by disabling or whitelisting the Adblock for "justintools.com". I've spent over 10 trillion microseconds (and counting), on this project. This site is my passion, and I regularly adding new tools/apps. Users experience is very important, that's why I use non-intrusive ads. Any feedback is appreciated. Thank you. Justin XoXo :)
An arcsecond (arsec) or second of arc is 1/60 of an arcminute, 1/3600 of a degree, 1/1296000 of a turn, and π/648000 (about 1/206265) of a radian.
In relation to the base unit of [angle] => (radians), 1 Microarcseconds (μas) is equal to 4.8481368E-12 radians, while 1 Arcseconds (arcsec) = 4.848137E-6 radians.40000 Microarcseconds | to common angle units |
---|---|
40000 μas | = 1.93925472E-7 radians (rad) |
40000 μas | = 0.000193925472 milliradians (mrad/mil) |
40000 μas | = 0.00019753080423897 angular mils (µ mil) |
40000 μas | = 1.1111110652377E-5 degrees (°deg) |
40000 μas | = 1.2345679194686E-5 gradians (grad) |
40000 μas | = 0.00066666714336789 arcminutes (arcmin) |
40000 μas | = 0.039999998349882 arcseconds (arcsec) |
40000 μas | = 1.8518510539554E-7 sextants (60°) |
40000 μas | = 3.7036950343774E-7 signs (30°) |
40000 μas | = 3.0864174408223E-8 turns (t) |