Radiation Converter
Comprehensive Radiation Converter
Radiation is commonly quantified by the energy absorbed per unit mass, measured in gray per second (Gy/s). Our Radiation Converter allows you to seamlessly convert between various radiation units—from the base unit (gray/second) to larger multiples such as exagray/second, petagray/second, teragray/second, gigagray/second, megagray/second, and kilogray/second, down to smaller multiples such as hectogray, dekagray, decigray, centigray, milligray, microgray, nanogray, picogray, femtogray, and attogray per second. Additionally, it supports related units such as rad/second, joule/kilogram/second, watt/kilogram, sievert/second, and rem/second.
What Units Are Covered?
Our converter supports a complete list of radiation units with conversion factors defined relative to gray/second [Gy/s]:
Gray/second [Gy/s] (base unit)
Exagray/second [EGy/s]: 1 EGy/s = 1.0E+18 Gy/s.
Petagray/second [PGy/s]: 1 PGy/s = 1.0E+15 Gy/s.
Teragray/second [TGy/s]: 1 TGy/s = 1.0E+12 Gy/s.
Gigagray/second [GGy/s]: 1 GGy/s = 1.0E+9 Gy/s.
Megagray/second [MGy/s]: 1 MGy/s = 1.0E+6 Gy/s.
Kilogray/second [kGy/s]: 1 kGy/s = 1000 Gy/s.
Hectogray/second [hGy/s]: 1 hGy/s = 100 Gy/s.
Dekagray/second [daGy/s]: 1 daGy/s = 10 Gy/s.
Decigray/second [dGy/s]: 1 dGy/s = 0.1 Gy/s.
Centigray/second [cGy/s]: 1 cGy/s = 0.01 Gy/s.
Milligray/second [mGy/s]: 1 mGy/s = 0.001 Gy/s.
Microgray/second [µGy/s]: 1 µGy/s = 1.0E-6 Gy/s.
Nanogray/second [nGy/s]: 1 nGy/s = 1.0E-9 Gy/s.
Picogray/second [pGy/s]: 1 pGy/s = 1.0E-12 Gy/s.
Femtogray/second [fGy/s]: 1 fGy/s = 1.0E-15 Gy/s.
Attogray/second [aGy/s]: 1 aGy/s = 1.0E-18 Gy/s.
Rad/second [rad/s]: 1 rad/s = 0.01 Gy/s.
Joule/kilogram/second: 1 J/(kg·s) = 1 Gy/s.
Watt/kilogram [W/kg]: 1 W/kg = 1 Gy/s.
Sievert/second [Sv/s]: 1 Sv/s = 1 Gy/s.
Rem/second [rem/s]: 1 rem/s = 0.01 Gy/s.
How Does It Work?
The converter uses a two-step process:
Convert to the Base Unit:
The input value is first converted to gray/second (Gy/s) using the conversion factor of the selected “From” unit.Convert to the Target Unit:
The value in Gy/s is then converted to your chosen “To” unit using its corresponding conversion factor.
This approach ensures precise and consistent radiation conversions for your scientific and engineering calculations.