How many examicrometer of water [4 °C] in 1 inch of mercury? The answer is 3.4531554268447E-13. We assume you are converting between examicrometer of water [4 °C] and inch of mercury [0 °C]. You can view more details on each measurement unit: examicrometer of water [4 °C] or inch of mercury The SI derived unit for pressure is the pascal. 1 pascal is equal to 1.0197162129779E-16 examicrometer of water [4 °C], or 0.00029529983071445 inch of mercury. Note that rounding errors may occur, so always check the results. Use this page to learn how to convert between examicrometers of water and inches of mercury. Type in your own numbers in the form to convert the units!
1 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 2895902084875.9 inch of mercury
2 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 5791804169751.7 inch of mercury
3 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 8687706254627.6 inch of mercury
4 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 11583608339503 inch of mercury
5 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 14479510424379 inch of mercury
6 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 17375412509255 inch of mercury
7 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 20271314594131 inch of mercury
8 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 23167216679007 inch of mercury
9 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 26063118763883 inch of mercury
10 examicrometer of water [4 °C] to inch of mercury = 28959020848759 inch of mercury
You can do the reverse unit conversion from inch of mercury to examicrometer of water [4 °C], or enter any two units below:
Inches of mercury or inHg is a non-SI unit for pressure. It is still widely used for barometric pressure in weather reports and aviation in the United States, but is considered somewhat outdated elsewhere.
It is defined as the pressure exerted by a column of mercury of 1 inch in height at 32 °F (0 °C) at the standard acceleration of gravity.
1 inHg = 3,386.389 pascals at 0 °C.
Aircraft operating at higher altitudes (above 18,000 feet) set their barometric altimeters to a standard pressure of 29.92 inHg or 1,013.2 hPa (1 hPa = 1 mbar) regardless of the actual sea level pressure, with inches of mercury used in the U.S. and Canada. The resulting altimeter readings are known as flight levels.
Piston engine aircraft with constant-speed propellers also use inHg to measure manifold pressure, which is indicative of engine power produced.
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