Instant · Precise · Universal
34 units available
6 categories total
To convert ng to µg: divide by 1,000. To convert ng to grams: multiply by 10⁻⁹.
1 ng = 10⁻⁹ g = 10⁻¹² kg = 1,000 pg = 0.001 µg.
For example, 1 Nanogram (ng) = 5.028992e-43 Sun's Mass (M☉).
| Nanogram (ng) | Sun's Mass (M☉) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 5.028992e-44 |
| 0.5 | 2.514496e-43 |
| 1 | 5.028992e-43 |
| 2 | 1.005798e-42 |
| 5 | 2.514496e-42 |
| 10 | 5.028992e-42 |
| 25 | 1.257248e-41 |
| 50 | 2.514496e-41 |
| 100 | 5.028992e-41 |
| 500 | 2.514496e-40 |
| 1000 | 5.028992e-40 |
The nanogram is a unit of mass equal to 10⁻⁹ grams or 10⁻¹² kilograms — one billionth of a gram.
1 ng = 10⁻⁹ g = 10⁻¹² kg = 1,000 pg = 0.001 µg.
To convert ng to µg: divide by 1,000. To convert ng to grams: multiply by 10⁻⁹.
Drug dosing in ng/mL (blood levels), pesticide residue testing, and pollution monitoring (e.g., dioxin levels).
Many potent drugs are effective at blood concentrations of just a few ng/mL — a testament to how sensitive your body is.
Confusing ng/mL with µg/mL — a factor of 1,000 difference that can cause dangerous dosing errors in medicine.
Drug levels in blood are often in ng/mL — if someone says 'nanograms per milliliter', think trace-level drug monitoring.
The solar mass is the mass of the Sun, approximately 1.989 × 10³⁰ kilograms — about 333,000 times the mass of Earth.
M☉ = 1.98847 × 10³⁰ kg ≈ 333,000 M⊕ ≈ 1,048 M_Jupiter.
To convert solar masses to kg: multiply by 1.98847 × 10³⁰.
Expressing stellar masses: Betelgeuse ≈ 15 M☉, Sirius ≈ 2 M☉, a typical neutron star ≈ 1.4 M☉.
The Sun loses about 5 million tonnes per second through nuclear fusion (E=mc²), but that's only 10⁻¹³ M☉ per year.
The Sun is losing mass continuously through radiation and solar wind — its mass is not quite constant over billions of years.
Almost everything in astronomy uses solar masses: stars (0.1–100 M☉), galaxies (10⁹–10¹² M☉), black holes (3–10⁹ M☉).



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