Bar to Pascal
bar
pascal
bar to pascal Conversion Table
bar (bar) | pascal (Pa) | |
---|---|---|
0.01 bar | → | 1000.0 Pa |
0.1 bar | → | 10000.0 Pa |
1.0 bar | → | 100000.0 Pa |
2.0 bar | → | 200000.0 Pa |
3.0 bar | → | 300000.0 Pa |
5.0 bar | → | 500000.0 Pa |
10.0 bar | → | 1000000.0 Pa |
20.0 bar | → | 2000000.0 Pa |
30.0 bar | → | 3000000.0 Pa |
50.0 bar | → | 5000000.0 Pa |
100.0 bar | → | 10000000.0 Pa |
1000.0 bar | → | 100000000.0 Pa |
Example Conversion
To convert from bar to pascal, multiply by 100000.0.
For example: 22 bar = 22 × 100000.0 = 2200000.0 pascal
Unit History
About bar
The bar was introduced in the early 20th century for meteorology as a convenient approximation of atmospheric pressure. Although not an SI unit, it remains common in industry.
About pascal
Named after Blaise Pascal, the pascal is the SI unit for pressure and equals one newton per square meter. It is widely used in physics, meteorology, and engineering analysis.