Magnetic Field Strength Converter

Professional magnetic field strength converter with detailed breakdowns and physics applications

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Quick Conversions
1 Tesla 10,000 Gauss
1,000 Gauss 100 mT
50 μT (Earth's field) 50,000 nT
1 Oersted 79.6 A/m

How to Use the Magnetic Field Strength Converter

Our comprehensive magnetic field strength converter provides accurate magnetic field measurements for all your physics, engineering, and research needs:

🔬 Physics & Research

Essential for physicists, researchers, and laboratory scientists working with magnetic fields, electromagnetic experiments, and materials science. Convert between tesla, gauss, and other magnetic units for precise field measurements and experimental data analysis.

⚙️ Engineering & Electronics

Critical for electrical engineers, electronics designers, and magnetic component specialists working with transformers, motors, sensors, and magnetic materials. Handle accurate field strength conversions for device specifications and electromagnetic compatibility testing.

🌍 Geophysics & Astronomy

Perfect for geophysicists, astronomers, and space scientists measuring Earth's magnetic field, solar magnetic phenomena, and cosmic magnetic fields. Convert between nanotesla, gamma, and other specialized units used in geomagnetic and space physics applications.

All calculations follow international magnetic field standards with support for both SI and CGS magnetic units. Perfect for physicists, engineers, researchers, and professionals needing accurate magnetic field conversions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Our converter supports all standard magnetic field units: tesla (T), gauss (G), millitesla (mT), microtesla (μT), nanotesla (nT), oersted (Oe), ampere per meter (A/m), weber per square meter (Wb/m²), maxwell per square centimeter, and gamma (γ). Perfect for physics, engineering, and geophysics applications.
Tesla (T) and gauss (G) both measure magnetic flux density (magnetic field strength). Tesla is the SI unit, while gauss is the CGS unit. 1 tesla = 10,000 gauss. Tesla is used for strong fields (MRI, research), while gauss is common for weaker fields and everyday applications.
Earth's magnetic field varies from about 25-65 microtesla (μT) or 0.25-0.65 gauss, depending on location. At the magnetic poles it's stronger (~65 μT), at the magnetic equator it's weaker (~25 μT). This is measured using nanotesla (nT) for precise geomagnetic studies.
Yes! Our magnetic field converter provides the precision needed for scientific research, physics experiments, and engineering applications. It handles all magnetic field conversions required for laboratory measurements, geophysics, astronomy, and electromagnetic research with professional accuracy.
Oersted (Oe) and ampere per meter (A/m) both measure magnetic field intensity. 1 oersted = 79.577 A/m. Oersted is the CGS unit traditionally used in magnetism, while A/m is the SI unit. Both describe the magnetic field that produces the magnetic flux density in materials.