Gigavolt-Ampere Reactive Hour [GVARh] to Millivolt-Ampere Reactive Hour [mVARh] Converter
GVARh
mVARh
How to Convert Gigavolt-Ampere Reactive Hour to Millivolt-Ampere Reactive HourMillivolt-Ampere Reactive Hour
1 GVARh = 1000000000000 mVARh
1 mVARh = 1e-12 GVARh
Example: convert 12 GVARh to mVARh:
12 GVARh = 12 x 1000000000000 = 12000000000000 mVARh
Gigavolt-Ampere Reactive Hour
Definition: The gigavolt-ampere reactive hour (GVARh) is a unit of measurement for reactive energy in electrical systems. It represents the amount of reactive power (in gigavolt-amperes reactive, GVAR) consumed or supplied over a period of one hour. One GVARh is equal to 1000 MVARh.
History/origin: Similar to MVARh, GVARh emerged as a scaling of VARh to represent larger quantities of reactive energy. The 'giga' prefix signifies a billion VARh. It's a part of the evolution of electrical power measurement units to accommodate increasing power demands.
Current use: GVARh is typically used for very large-scale reactive power measurement and billing, often associated with major industrial facilities or transmission networks where reactive power flows are significant.
Millivolt-Ampere Reactive Hour
Definition: A millivolt-ampere reactive hour (mVARh) is a unit of reactive energy equal to one-thousandth of a VARh. It represents a very small amount of reactive energy.
History/origin: Similar to mWh, it uses the SI prefix 'milli-' to denote a factor of one-thousandth.
Current use: Used in specialized applications involving sensitive electronics where reactive power needs to be monitored at very low levels.
Gigavolt-Ampere Reactive Hour to Millivolt-Ampere Reactive Hour Conversion Table
Gigavolt-Ampere Reactive Hour [GVARh] | Millivolt-Ampere Reactive Hour [mVARh] |
---|---|
0.01 GVARh | 10000000000 mVARh |
0.1 GVARh | 100000000000 mVARh |
1 GVARh | 1000000000000 mVARh |
10 GVARh | 10000000000000 mVARh |
50 GVARh | 50000000000000 mVARh |
100 GVARh | 100000000000000 mVARh |
1000 GVARh | 1000000000000000 mVARh |
10000 GVARh | 10000000000000000 mVARh |
Common pairs of Reactive Energy