What is micrometre?

A micrometre, also called a micron, is a unit of length equal to one millionth of a metre. It is used in microscopy, semiconductor fabrication, and the measurement of fine particles and biological cells.

Real-world uses

Micrometres (microns) are used to measure biological cells, bacteria, semiconductor chip features, and fine particle sizes in air quality monitoring. Paint film thickness, fibre diameters, and precision machining tolerances are also specified in µm.

History

The micrometre was formalized with SI prefix standardization in the 20th century. The term "micron" was officially revoked by the SI in 1967 in favour of "micrometre," though "micron" persists informally in many industries.

Common mistakes

Using the symbol "u" instead of the correct "µ" (Greek mu). Also, confusing micrometres with nanometres—a human hair is about 70 µm wide, not 70 nm.

What is millimetre?

A millimetre is a metric unit of length equal to one thousandth of a metre. It is used in precision manufacturing, medical imaging, engineering tolerances, and detailed technical specifications.

Real-world uses

Millimetres are essential in precision engineering, machining tolerances, and manufacturing specifications. Rainfall is reported in mm by meteorological services worldwide. Dentists measure cavity depths and orthodontic adjustments in millimetres.

History

Part of the original French metric system from the 1790s. The prefix "milli-" derives from the Latin "mille" meaning thousand, indicating one-thousandth of a metre. It became critical with the rise of precision manufacturing in the Industrial Revolution.

Common mistakes

Confusing millimetres with centimetres when reading rulers—each small division on a metric ruler is 1 mm, not 1 cm. Also, mixing up mm with mils (thousandths of an inch) in engineering contexts.

When is this conversion used?

Converting micrometre to millimetre is useful in the length domain when comparing values across different measurement standards or applying formulas that require a specific unit.

Worked examples

1 micrometre = 0.001 millimetre

1 millimetre = 0.001 metre

How to convert micrometre to millimetre

To convert micrometre to millimetre, multiply the value by 0.001.

To convert millimetre back to micrometre, multiply by 1,000.

Measurement standards

The metre is one of seven SI base units, maintained by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM). Since 2019, it is defined by fixing the numerical value of the speed of light in vacuum to exactly 299,792,458 metres per second.

Did you know?

A human hair is roughly 70 micrometres wide, while a single gold atom measures about 0.144 nanometres in diameter — meaning you could line up nearly half a million atoms across the width of one hair.

Quick reference: micrometre to millimetre

micrometremillimetre
0.10.0001
0.50.0005
10.001
20.002
50.005
100.01
250.025
500.05
1000.1
2500.25
5000.5
1,0001

Common values

micrometremillimetre
Height of a door2,100,000 micrometre2,100 millimetre
Basketball court length28,000,000 micrometre28,000 millimetre
Football field (soccer)105,000,000 micrometre105,000 millimetre
Marathon distance4.219500e+10 micrometre42,195,000 millimetre
Altitude of a cruising airplane1.066800e+10 micrometre10,668,000 millimetre