Temperature · Unit Converter

Convert Electronvolt to Microkelvin

Convert electronvolts to microkelvins instantly. 1 eV = 1.160452e+10 µK — use the live calculator, the exact formula, a reference-temperature table and worked examples. Also check the Microkelvin to Electronvolt converter for the reverse conversion.

Written by Sunith Babu L, Ph.D., Lead Engineer Reviewed by Girish V Kulkarni Ph.D.
Temperature category 2 min read Published Last reviewed Updated

Units explained

Scientific & Fixed-Point

Electronvolt

What is an electronvolt?

As a temperature unit, one electronvolt (eV) is the temperature at which a particle's characteristic thermal energy kT equals one electronvolt — exactly 11,604.51812 kelvins under the 2019 SI definitions of e and k.

Origin of the electronvolt

Comes from the plasma-physics and astrophysics habit of quoting temperatures directly as energies through the Boltzmann relation E = kT, which removes constant unit conversions from the equations of hot ionized matter.

Where it is used

Standard in plasma physics, fusion research, and high-energy astrophysics: the core plasma of a tokamak runs at tens of kiloelectronvolts, while the Sun's core is about 1.3 keV.

When and where it was developed

Grew out of 20th-century particle- and plasma-physics convention; its kelvin equivalent became an exact number when the 2019 SI revision fixed both the elementary charge and the Boltzmann constant.

SI Prefixed Kelvin

Microkelvin

What is a microkelvin?

One microkelvin (µK) is one millionth of a kelvin (10⁻⁶ K) above absolute zero.

Origin of the microkelvin

Formed with the SI prefix 'micro-' (from Greek 'mikros', small) applied to the kelvin base unit.

Where it is used

Ultracold atomic physics — laser-cooled atom clouds and the atomic-fountain clocks that keep world time operate at microkelvin temperatures.

When and where it was developed

The micro- prefix entered metric usage with the 1873 British Association system and was formally adopted into the SI in 1960.

Electronvolt to Microkelvin conversion formula

The exact relationship between electronvolts and microkelvins:

µK = eV × 1.160452e+10
eV = µK × 8.617333e-11

To convert electronvolts to microkelvins, multiply the value in electronvolts by 1.160452e+10. To reverse, multiply the value in microkelvins by 8.617333e-11.

Both units count upward from absolute zero, so 0 eV = 0 µK and the relationship is a pure ratio.

How to use this converter

Type a value into the calculator. The result in microkelvins updates as you type. Tap a quick value, copy the result with one click, or use the swap arrow to jump straight to the Microkelvin to Electronvolt converter for the reverse direction.

Step-by-step: convert electronvolts to microkelvins

  1. Write down the temperature in electronvolts (eV).
  2. Multiply the value in electronvolts by 1.160452e+10.
  3. The result is the same temperature expressed in microkelvins (µK).
  4. To reverse, multiply the value in microkelvins by 8.617333e-11 — or open the Microkelvin to Electronvolt converter.

Worked examples

Example 1 — Convert 1 eV to µK:
1 × 1.160452e+10 = 1.160452e+10 µK

Example 2 — Convert 100 eV to µK:
100 × 1.160452e+10 = 1.160452e+12 µK

Electronvolt to Microkelvin conversion table

Physically meaningful reference temperatures, from absolute zero to the surface of the Sun, converted from electronvolts to microkelvins:

Electronvolt [eV]Microkelvin [µK]Reference point
00Absolute zero
0.02009131252.3315e+8Where Celsius and Fahrenheit coincide (−40°)
0.02200627542.553722e+8Zero Fahrenheit (0 °F)
0.02353824582.7315e+8Water freezes (0 °C / 32 °F)
0.02353910752.7316e+8Triple point of water
0.02439997912.8315e+8Cool day (10 °C / 50 °F)
0.02526171252.9315e+8Room temperature (20 °C / 68 °F)
0.02569257912.9815e+8Standard laboratory temperature (25 °C)
0.02612344583.0315e+8Hot day (30 °C / 86 °F)
0.02672665913.1015e+8Human body temperature (37 °C / 98.6 °F)
0.02698517913.1315e+8Heat-wave day (40 °C / 104 °F)
0.02784691243.2315e+8Hot tap water (50 °C / 122 °F)
0.03215557913.7315e+8Water boils (100 °C / 212 °F)
0.03904944574.5315e+8Moderate baking oven (180 °C / 356 °F)
0.49790951595.778e+9Surface of the Sun (≈5,505 °C)

Frequently asked questions

How many microkelvins is 1 electronvolt?
1 electronvolt equals 1.160452e+10 microkelvins.
How do I convert electronvolts to microkelvins?
Use the formula µK = eV × 1.160452e+10: multiply the value in electronvolts by 1.160452e+10.
How do I convert microkelvins back to electronvolts?
Apply the reverse formula eV = µK × 8.617333e-11 — multiply the value in microkelvins by 8.617333e-11 — or use the Microkelvin to Electronvolt converter.
How many microkelvins is 100 electronvolts?
100 electronvolts equals 1.160452e+12 microkelvins, because 100 × 1.160452e+10 = 1.160452e+12.
Can a temperature be below absolute zero?
No. Absolute zero (0 K = −273.15 °C = −459.67 °F) is the floor of the thermodynamic temperature scale. The calculator flags any input that would fall below it.

Convert Electronvolt to other temperature units

Show all Electronvolt conversions

Sources & references

Conversion relationship (1 eV = 1.160452e+10 µK) verified against the following authoritative sources:

Results are provided for general reference. Verify critical measurements against an authoritative standard.