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Convert Pascals to Megapascals

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Science

Pressure Converter
10 sig. figures
Formula1 Pa × 0.000001 = 0.000001 MPa

About Pressure Conversions

Pressure units span diverse fields: pascals dominate engineering, atmospheres and bars are used in diving and industrial applications, millimeters of mercury (mmHg) are standard in medicine for blood pressure, and pounds per square inch (PSI) are ubiquitous in tire pressure and pneumatic systems. Weather reports use hectopascals (millibars) or inches of mercury depending on the region. Converting between these units accurately is safety-critical in applications like dive planning, where pressure miscalculations can be life-threatening.

Quick Conversions

PascalsMegapascals
1 Pa0.000001 MPa
2 Pa0.000002 MPa
5 Pa0.000005 MPa
10 Pa0.00001 MPa
25 Pa0.000025 MPa
50 Pa0.00005 MPa
100 Pa0.0001 MPa
250 Pa0.00025 MPa
500 Pa0.0005 MPa
1000 Pa0.001 MPa
Unit NameSymbolPer 1 Pascal
Atmosphereatm0.00000986923
Barbar0.00001
Inch of MercuryinHg0.0002953
KilopascalkPa0.001
MegapascalMPa0.000001
Millibarmbar0.01
Millimeter of MercurymmHg0.00750064
PascalPa1
PSIpsi0.000145038
TorrTorr0.00750064

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I convert Pascals to Megapascals?

To convert Pascals to Megapascals, use the conversion where 1 Pascal (Pa) = 0.000001 Megapascals (MPa). For example, 1 Pascal = 0.000001 Megapascals.

What are common Pascal to Megapascal conversions?

Here are common conversions: 1 Pascals = 0.000001 Megapascals, 5 Pascals = 0.000005 Megapascals, 10 Pascals = 0.00001 Megapascals, 25 Pascals = 0.000025 Megapascals, 50 Pascals = 0.00005 Megapascals, 100 Pascals = 0.0001 Megapascals.

When would I need to convert Pascals to Megapascals?

Pressure conversions are critical in weather forecasting (millibars to inches of mercury), tire maintenance (PSI to bar), diving calculations (atmospheres), industrial engineering (pascals), and medical applications (mmHg for blood pressure).

How precise are the conversions?

All conversions use exact factors verified against NIST and ISO standards with up to 10 significant figures of precision. Results are calculated using IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, which provides approximately 15-17 significant digits. For temperature and other non-linear conversions, exact formulas are used rather than approximations.