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 :)

Share on FB Twitter Whatsapp linkedIn Tumblr Reddit Pin Print email

Convert [Hiroshima Bomb Explosion] to [Decajoules], (hbe to daJ)

ENERGY


158300 Hiroshima Bomb Explosion
= 9.498E+17 Decajoules
swap

*Select units, input value, then convert.

Embed to your site/blog Convert to scientific notation.
Category: energy
Conversion: Hiroshima Bomb Explosion to Decajoules
The base unit for energy is joules (Non-SI/Derived Unit)
[Hiroshima Bomb Explosion] symbol/abbrevation: (hbe)
[Decajoules] symbol/abbrevation: (daJ)

How to convert Hiroshima Bomb Explosion to Decajoules (hbe to daJ)?
1 hbe = 6000000000000 daJ.
158300 x 6000000000000 daJ = 9.498E+17 Decajoules.
Always check the results; rounding errors may occur.

Definition:

The energy released by the Hiroshima bomb explosion (about 15 kt TNT equivalent, or 6x10^13 J) is often used by geologists as a unit when describing the ener ..more definition+

In relation to the base unit of [energy] => (joules), 1 Hiroshima Bomb Explosion (hbe) is equal to 60000000000000 joules, while 1 Decajoules (daJ) = 10 joules.
158300 Hiroshima Bomb Explosion to common energy units
158300 hbe = 9.498E+18 joules (J)
158300 hbe = 9.498E+15 kilojoules (kJ)
158300 hbe = 2.2700764818356E+18 calories (cal)
158300 hbe = 2.2700764818356E+15 kilocalories (kcal)
158300 hbe = 5.9281728644722E+37 electron volt (eV)
158300 hbe = 2.6383333333333E+15 watt hour (Wh)
158300 hbe = 2.1785682829084E+36 atomic unit of energy (au)
158300 hbe = 2270076481.8356 tons of TNT (tTNT)
158300 hbe = 7.0053652938355E+18 foot pound force (ft lbf)
158300 hbe = 9.498E+25 ergs (ergs)
(Hiroshima Bomb Explosion) to (Decajoules) conversions

Hiroshima Bomb Explosion to random (energy units)

Random [energy unit] conversions