Convert Pascal to Standard atmosphere

Please provide values below to convert Pascal [Pa] to Standard atmosphere [atm]

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Unit Information

Pascal (Pa)

Definition: The SI unit of pressure, equal to one newton per square meter.

History: Named after French mathematician Blaise Pascal.

Current Use: Standard unit for pressure in scientific applications.

Kilopascal (kPa)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to 1000 pascals.

History: Commonly used for practical pressure measurements.

Current Use: Used for tire pressure, weather, and engineering.

Megapascal (MPa)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to 1,000,000 pascals.

History: Derived from the pascal, used for very high pressure measurements.

Current Use: Common in high-pressure systems like hydraulics and aerospace.

Bar (bar)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to 100,000 pascals.

History: From Greek word "baros" meaning weight.

Current Use: Widely used in meteorology and engineering.

Millibar (mbar)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to one thousandth of a bar, or 100 pascals.

History: Historically used in meteorology and closely related to the hectopascal.

Current Use: Still seen in legacy weather reports; hPa is preferred today.

Pound per Square Inch (psi)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to one pound-force per square inch.

History: Traditional imperial unit.

Current Use: Commonly used in the US for tire and gas pressure.

Standard Atmosphere (atm)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to 101,325 pascals.

History: Based on average atmospheric pressure at sea level.

Current Use: Used as a reference pressure in various applications.

Torr (Torr)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to 1/760 of a standard atmosphere.

History: Named after Italian physicist Evangelista Torricelli.

Current Use: Used in vacuum technology and medicine.

Hectopascal (hPa)

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to 100 pascals.

History: Common in meteorology as a direct SI alternative to millibar (1 hPa = 1 mbar).

Current Use: Standard for atmospheric pressure in weather reports.

Pound-force inch pressure (lbf/in)

Definition: A unit of pressure based on force per inch.

History: Used in engineering and hydraulics.

Current Use: Found in some engineering applications.

All Unit Conversions

Pascal to KilopascalPascal to MegapascalPascal to BarPascal to MillibarPascal to Pound per Square InchPascal to Standard AtmospherePascal to TorrPascal to HectopascalPascal to Pound-force inch pressureKilopascal to PascalKilopascal to MegapascalKilopascal to BarKilopascal to MillibarKilopascal to Pound per Square InchKilopascal to Standard AtmosphereKilopascal to TorrKilopascal to HectopascalKilopascal to Pound-force inch pressureMegapascal to PascalMegapascal to KilopascalMegapascal to BarMegapascal to MillibarMegapascal to Pound per Square InchMegapascal to Standard AtmosphereMegapascal to TorrMegapascal to HectopascalMegapascal to Pound-force inch pressureBar to PascalBar to KilopascalBar to MegapascalBar to MillibarBar to Pound per Square InchBar to Standard AtmosphereBar to TorrBar to HectopascalBar to Pound-force inch pressureMillibar to PascalMillibar to KilopascalMillibar to MegapascalMillibar to BarMillibar to Pound per Square InchMillibar to Standard AtmosphereMillibar to TorrMillibar to HectopascalMillibar to Pound-force inch pressurePound per Square Inch to PascalPound per Square Inch to KilopascalPound per Square Inch to MegapascalPound per Square Inch to BarPound per Square Inch to MillibarPound per Square Inch to Standard AtmospherePound per Square Inch to TorrPound per Square Inch to HectopascalPound per Square Inch to Pound-force inch pressureStandard Atmosphere to PascalStandard Atmosphere to KilopascalStandard Atmosphere to MegapascalStandard Atmosphere to BarStandard Atmosphere to MillibarStandard Atmosphere to Pound per Square InchStandard Atmosphere to TorrStandard Atmosphere to HectopascalStandard Atmosphere to Pound-force inch pressureTorr to PascalTorr to KilopascalTorr to MegapascalTorr to BarTorr to MillibarTorr to Pound per Square InchTorr to Standard AtmosphereTorr to HectopascalTorr to Pound-force inch pressureHectopascal to PascalHectopascal to KilopascalHectopascal to MegapascalHectopascal to BarHectopascal to MillibarHectopascal to Pound per Square InchHectopascal to Standard AtmosphereHectopascal to TorrHectopascal to Pound-force inch pressurePound-force inch pressure to PascalPound-force inch pressure to KilopascalPound-force inch pressure to MegapascalPound-force inch pressure to BarPound-force inch pressure to MillibarPound-force inch pressure to Pound per Square InchPound-force inch pressure to Standard AtmospherePound-force inch pressure to TorrPound-force inch pressure to Hectopascal

Did you know?

  • Standard atmospheric pressure equals 101,325 pascals.
  • The bar is commonly used in meteorology and automotive engineering.
  • Pounds per square inch (PSI) is common in the United States.

Common Conversions

Convert Pascals to PSI

Pa / 6894.76

Convert Atmospheres to Pascals

atm * 101325

Convert Pascal to Standard Atmosphere

How this conversion works

Converting Pascal (Pa) to Standard Atmosphere (atm) is straightforward with Unitly. We apply lossless base-unit math under the hood so you get consistent answers whether you are auditing data pipelines, planning infrastructure, or double-checking homework.

Quick reference: 1 Pa equals 0.000009869233 atm. Conversely, 1 atm equals 101,325 Pa. Combine these ratios with the in-page calculator to convert any value instantly.

About Pascal

Definition: The SI unit of pressure, equal to one newton per square meter.

History: Named after French mathematician Blaise Pascal.

Current use: Standard unit for pressure in scientific applications.

About Standard Atmosphere

Definition: A unit of pressure equal to 101,325 pascals.

History: Based on average atmospheric pressure at sea level.

Current use: Used as a reference pressure in various applications.

Related conversions

Questions people ask

What is a pascal?
A pascal (Pa) is the SI unit for pressure.
How do I convert pascals to atmospheres?
Divide the number of pascals by 101,325 to get atmospheres.

Need to cite your work? Pair these explanations with our JSON-LD schema (already embedded on the page) so search engines and analytics platforms understand the context behind each conversion.