
The angstrom (/ˈæŋstrəm/;ANG-strəm) is a unit of length equal to 10−10 m; that is, one ten-billionth of a metre, a hundred-millionth of a centimetre, 0.1 nanometre, or 100 picometres. The unit is named after the Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Ångström (1814–1874). It was originally spelled with Swedish letters, as Ångström and later as ångström (/ˈɒŋstrəm/). The latter spelling is still listed in some dictionaries, but is now rare in English texts. Some popular US dictionaries list only the spelling angstrom.
angstrom | |
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![]() The width of a hydrogen atom is about 1.1 angstroms; the width of a proton (in black) is 1.7×10−5 angstroms. | |
General information | |
Unit system | Non-SI metric unit |
Unit of | Length |
Symbol | Å |
Named after | Anders Jonas Ångström |
Conversions | |
1 Å in ... | ... is equal to ... |
SI Units | 10−10 m = 0.1 nm |
CGS Units | 10−8 cm |
Imperial units | 3.937008×10−9 in |
Planck units | 6.187×1024 lP |
The unit's symbol is Å, which is a letter of the Swedish alphabet, regardless of how the unit is spelled. However, "A"[citation needed] or "A.U." may be used in less formal contexts or typographically limited media.
The angstrom is often used in the natural sciences and technology to express sizes of atoms, molecules, microscopic biological structures, and lengths of chemical bonds, arrangement of atoms in crystals,wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, and dimensions of integrated circuit parts. The atomic (covalent) radii of phosphorus, sulfur, and chlorine are about 1 angstrom, while that of hydrogen is about 0.5 angstroms. Visible light has wavelengths in the range of 4000–7000 Å.
In the late 19th century, spectroscopists adopted 10−10 of a metre as a convenient unit to express the wavelengths of characteristic spectral lines (monochromatic components of the emission spectrum) of chemical elements. However, they soon realized that the definition of the metre at the time, based on a material artifact, was not accurate enough for their work. So, around 1907 they defined their own unit of length, which they called "Ångström", based on the wavelength of a specific spectral line. It was only in 1960, when the metre was redefined in the same way, that the angstrom became again equal to 10−10 metre. Yet the angstrom was never part of the SI system of units, and has been increasingly replaced by the nanometre (10−9 m) or picometre (10−12 m).
History
In 1868, Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Ångström created a chart of the spectrum of sunlight, in which he expressed the wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation in the electromagnetic spectrum in multiples of one ten-millionth of a millimetre (or 10−7 mm.) Ångström's chart and table of wavelengths in the solar spectrum became widely used in the solar physics community, which adopted the unit and named it after him.[citation needed] It subsequently spread to the fields of astronomical spectroscopy, atomic spectroscopy, and then to other sciences that deal with atomic-scale structures.
Early connection to the metre
Although intended to correspond to 10−10 metres, that definition was not accurate enough for spectroscopy work. Until 1960 the metre was defined as the distance between two scratches on a bar of platinum-iridium alloy, kept at the BIPM in Paris in a carefully controlled environment. Reliance on that material standard had led to an early error of about one part in 6000 in the tabulated wavelengths. Ångström took the precaution of having the standard bar he used checked against a standard in Paris, but the metrologist Henri Tresca reported it to be so incorrect that Ångström's corrected results were more in error than the uncorrected ones.
Cadmium line definition
In 1892–1895, Albert A. Michelson and Jean-René Benoît, working at the BIPM with specially developed equipment, determined that the length of the international metre standard was equal to 1553163.5 times the wavelength of the red line of the emission spectrum of electrically excited cadmium vapor. In 1907, the International Union for Cooperation in Solar Research (which later became the International Astronomical Union) defined the international angstrom as precisely 1/6438.4696 of the wavelength of that line (in dry air at 15 °C (hydrogen scale) and 760 mmHg under a gravity of 9.8067 m/s2).
This definition was endorsed at the 7th General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) in 1927,[citation needed] but the material definition of the metre was retained until 1960. From 1927 to 1960, the angstrom remained a secondary unit of length for use in spectroscopy, defined separately from the metre.[citation needed]
Redefinition in terms of the metre
In 1960, the metre itself was redefined in spectroscopic terms, which allowed the angstrom to be redefined as being exactly 0.1 nanometres.[citation needed]
Angstrom star
After the redefinition of the metre in spectroscopic terms, the Angstrom was formally redefined to be 0.1 nanometres. However, there was briefly thought to be a need for a separate unit of comparable size defined directly in terms of spectroscopy. In 1965, J.A. Bearden defined the Angstrom Star (symbol: Å*) as 0.202901 times the wavelength of the tungsten line. This auxiliary unit was intended to be accurate to within 5 parts per million of the version derived from the new metre. Within ten years, the unit had been deemed both insufficiently accurate (with accuracies closer to 15 parts per million) and obsolete due to higher precision measuring equipment.
Current status
Although still widely used in physics and chemistry, the angstrom is not officially a part of the International System of Units (SI). Up to 2019, it was listed as a compatible unit by both the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) and the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). However, it is not mentioned in the 9th edition of the official SI standard, the "BIPM Brochure" (2019) or in the NIST version of the same, and BIPM officially discourages its use. The angstrom is also not included in the European Union's catalogue of units of measure that may be used within its internal market.
Symbol
For compatibility reasons, Unicode assigns a code point U+212B Å ANGSTROM SIGN for the angstrom symbol, which is accessible in HTML as the entity Å
, Å
, or Å
. However, version 5 of the standard already deprecates that code point and has it normalized into the code for the Swedish letter U+00C5 Å LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE (HTML entity Å
, Å
, or Å
), which should be used instead.
In older publications, where the Å glyph was unavailable, the unit was sometimes written as "A.U.". An example is Bragg's 1921 classical paper on the structure of ice, which gives the c- and a-axis lattice constants as 4.52 A.U. and 7.34 A.U., respectively. Ambiguously, the abbreviation "a.u." may also refer to the atomic unit of length, the bohr—about 0.53 Å—or the much larger astronomical unit (about 1.5×1011 m).
See also
- Orders of magnitude (length) § 100 picometres (for objects on this scale)
- Conversion of units
- X unit
References
- Oxford University Press (2019) Entry "angstrom" by Oxford Living Dictionaries online; Archived on 2019-03-06. Spellings "angstrom" [aŋstrəm] and "ångström"; symbol "Å"
- Merriam-Webster (2024): Entry "angstrom" in the [www.merriam-webster.com Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary]. Accessed 2024-01-30. Spelling "angstrom" [ˈaŋ-strəm], ['ȯŋ-strəm]
- HarperCollins (2024): Entry "angstrom" in the Collins English Dictionary online. Accessed on 2024-07-26. Spelling "angstrom" [ˈæŋstrʌm], [æŋstrəm]; symbols "Å", "A".
- Merriam-Webster (1989): Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language. Portland House, 1989
- John C. Wells (2008): Longman Pronunciation Dictionary, 3rd edition. ISBN 9781405881180
- Peter Roach (2011): Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary, 18th edition. ISBN 9780521152532
- Oxford University Press (1986) Entry "Ångström (unit)" in the Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition (1986); Archived on 2021-11-22. Spellings "Ångström" [ɔːŋstrœm] (capitalized) and "angstrom" (lowercase); symbols "Å", "Å.U.", "A.U." Quote: "The International Ångström (I.Å.) was defined in 1907 in terms of the wavelength of cadmium which in standard conditions is 6438·4696 I.Å. When the metre was defined in terms of the wavelength of krypton in 1960 the Ångström became exactly equal to 10−8 cm."
- International Bureau of Weights and Measures (2006), The International System of Units (SI) (PDF) (8th ed.), p. 127, ISBN 92-822-2213-6, archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-06-04, retrieved 2021-12-16
- IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "Ångström". doi:10.1351/goldbook.N00350
- Ambler Thompson and Barry N. Taylor (2009): "B.8 Factors for Units Listed Alphabetically". NIST Guide to the SI, National Institutes of Standards and Technology. Accessed on 2019-03-02
- William H. Bragg (1921): "The Crystal Structure of Ice". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London, volume 34, issue 1, page 98 doi:10.1088/1478-7814/34/1/322
- Arturas Vailionis (2015): "Geometry of Crystals" Lecture slides for MatSci162_172, Geometry; Stanford University. Archived on 2015-03-19
- Bureau international des poids et measures (2019): Le système international d'unités, complete brochure, 9th edition.
- NIST (2019): Special Publication 330: The International System of Units (SI) 2019 Edition.
- J. A. Bearden (1965): "Selection of the W Kα₁ as the X-Ray Wavelength Standard". Physical Review 2nd series, volume 137, issue 2B, pages 455B–B461. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.137.B455
- Ångström, A.J. (1868). Recherches sur le spectre solaire [Investigations of the solar spectrum] (in French). Uppsala, Sweden: W. Schultz. The 1869 edition (printed by Ferdinand Dümmler in Berlin) contains sketches of the solar spectrum.
- ChemTeam (2024)A Brief (Incomplete) History of Light and Spectra, from the ChemTeam website. Accessed on 2024-07-26.
- Brand, John C. D. (1995). Lines of Light: Sources of Dispersive Spectroscopy, 1800-1930. CRC Press. p. 47. ISBN 9782884491631.
- Albert A. Michelson (1895): "Détermination expérimentale de la valeur du mètre en longueurs d'ondes lumineuses" (= "Experimental determination of the value of the meter in terms of the lengths of light waves"); translated to French by Jean-René Benoît. Travaux et Mémoires du Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, volume 11, pages 1–85. Quote from p. 85, back-translated: "... the final conclusion of this work is that the fundamental unit of the metric system is represented by the following numbers of wavelengths of three emissions of cadmium, in air at 15 °C and at a pressure of 760 mm: Red emission … 1 m = 1553163,5λR ... It follows that the wavelengths of these emissions, always at 15 °C and at 760 mm, are (averages of three determinations): λR = 0,64384722μ" (where [1 μ = 1×10−6 m]"
- Jean-René Benoît, Charles Fabry, and Alfred Pérot (1907): "Nouvelle Détermination du mètre en longueurs d'ondes lumineuses" (= "A new determination of the metre in terms of the wavelength of light"). Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des sciences, volume 144, pages 1082-1086.
- Bureau international des poids et measures (1927): "Comptes rendus de la 7e réunion de la Conférence générale des poids et mesures" (= "Proceedings of the 7th meeting of the General Conference of Weights and Measures"), pages 85–88. Archived on 2018-11-18
- NIST CODATA - Committee on Data for Science and Technology (2024): "Angstrom star". Symbol: "Å*". Accessed on 2024-07-26.
- Curtis, I.; Morgan, I.; Hart, M.; Milne, A.D. (August 1971). "A New Determination of Avogadro's Number". In Langenberg, D. N.; Taylor, B.N. (eds.). Proceedings of the International Congress on Precision Measurement and Fundamental Constants (Report). Vol. 343. National Bureau of Standards. p. 285.
- Council of the European Communities (1979): "Council Directive 80/181/EEC of 20 December 1979 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to Unit of measurement and on the repeal of Directive 71/354/EEC". Accessed on 2011-09-23.
- The Unicode Consortium (2021): The Unicode Standard, Version 14.0; Chapter 22.2 "Letterlike Symbols", page 839. ISBN 978-1-936213-29-0
- The Unicode Consortium (2008): The Unicode Standard, Version 5.0; Chapter 15, "Symbols", page 493. ISBN 978-0-321-48091-0
- International Astronomical Union (2012): "Resolution B2: On the re-definition of the astronomical unit of length". Proceedings of the XXVIII General Assembly of International Astronomical Union, Beijing, China. Quote: "... recommends ... 5. that the unique symbol 'au' be used for the astronomical unit."
- Oxford Journals (2012): "Instructions for Authors". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Archived on 22 October 2012 Quote: "The units of length/distance are Å, nm, μm, mm, cm, m, km, au, light-year, pc."
- American Astronomical Society (2016): "Manuscript Preparation: AJ & ApJ Author Instructions". Archived on 2016-02-21. Quote: "Use standard abbreviations for ... natural units (e.g., au, pc, cm)."
External links
The angstrom ˈ ae ŋ s t r em ANG strem is a unit of length equal to 10 10 m that is one ten billionth of a metre a hundred millionth of a centimetre 0 1 nanometre or 100 picometres The unit is named after the Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Angstrom 1814 1874 It was originally spelled with Swedish letters as Angstrom and later as angstrom ˈ ɒ ŋ s t r em The latter spelling is still listed in some dictionaries but is now rare in English texts Some popular US dictionaries list only the spelling angstrom angstromThe width of a hydrogen atom is about 1 1 angstroms the width of a proton in black is 1 7 10 5 angstroms General informationUnit systemNon SI metric unitUnit ofLengthSymbolANamed afterAnders Jonas AngstromConversions1 A in is equal to SI Units 10 10 m 0 1 nm CGS Units 10 8 cm Imperial units 3 937008 10 9 in Planck units 6 187 1024 lP The unit s symbol is A which is a letter of the Swedish alphabet regardless of how the unit is spelled However A citation needed or A U may be used in less formal contexts or typographically limited media The angstrom is often used in the natural sciences and technology to express sizes of atoms molecules microscopic biological structures and lengths of chemical bonds arrangement of atoms in crystals wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation and dimensions of integrated circuit parts The atomic covalent radii of phosphorus sulfur and chlorine are about 1 angstrom while that of hydrogen is about 0 5 angstroms Visible light has wavelengths in the range of 4000 7000 A In the late 19th century spectroscopists adopted 10 10 of a metre as a convenient unit to express the wavelengths of characteristic spectral lines monochromatic components of the emission spectrum of chemical elements However they soon realized that the definition of the metre at the time based on a material artifact was not accurate enough for their work So around 1907 they defined their own unit of length which they called Angstrom based on the wavelength of a specific spectral line It was only in 1960 when the metre was redefined in the same way that the angstrom became again equal to 10 10 metre Yet the angstrom was never part of the SI system of units and has been increasingly replaced by the nanometre 10 9 m or picometre 10 12 m HistoryPortrait of Anders Angstrom In 1868 Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Angstrom created a chart of the spectrum of sunlight in which he expressed the wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation in the electromagnetic spectrum in multiples of one ten millionth of a millimetre or 10 7 mm Angstrom s chart and table of wavelengths in the solar spectrum became widely used in the solar physics community which adopted the unit and named it after him citation needed It subsequently spread to the fields of astronomical spectroscopy atomic spectroscopy and then to other sciences that deal with atomic scale structures Early connection to the metre Although intended to correspond to 10 10 metres that definition was not accurate enough for spectroscopy work Until 1960 the metre was defined as the distance between two scratches on a bar of platinum iridium alloy kept at the BIPM in Paris in a carefully controlled environment Reliance on that material standard had led to an early error of about one part in 6000 in the tabulated wavelengths Angstrom took the precaution of having the standard bar he used checked against a standard in Paris but the metrologist Henri Tresca reported it to be so incorrect that Angstrom s corrected results were more in error than the uncorrected ones Cadmium line definition In 1892 1895 Albert A Michelson and Jean Rene Benoit working at the BIPM with specially developed equipment determined that the length of the international metre standard was equal to 1553 163 5 times the wavelength of the red line of the emission spectrum of electrically excited cadmium vapor In 1907 the International Union for Cooperation in Solar Research which later became the International Astronomical Union defined the international angstrom as precisely 1 6438 4696 of the wavelength of that line in dry air at 15 C hydrogen scale and 760 mmHg under a gravity of 9 8067 m s2 This definition was endorsed at the 7th General Conference on Weights and Measures CGPM in 1927 citation needed but the material definition of the metre was retained until 1960 From 1927 to 1960 the angstrom remained a secondary unit of length for use in spectroscopy defined separately from the metre citation needed Redefinition in terms of the metre In 1960 the metre itself was redefined in spectroscopic terms which allowed the angstrom to be redefined as being exactly 0 1 nanometres citation needed Angstrom star After the redefinition of the metre in spectroscopic terms the Angstrom was formally redefined to be 0 1 nanometres However there was briefly thought to be a need for a separate unit of comparable size defined directly in terms of spectroscopy In 1965 J A Bearden defined the Angstrom Star symbol A as 0 202901 times the wavelength of the tungsten ka1 textstyle kappa alpha 1 line This auxiliary unit was intended to be accurate to within 5 parts per million of the version derived from the new metre Within ten years the unit had been deemed both insufficiently accurate with accuracies closer to 15 parts per million and obsolete due to higher precision measuring equipment Current status Although still widely used in physics and chemistry the angstrom is not officially a part of the International System of Units SI Up to 2019 it was listed as a compatible unit by both the International Bureau of Weights and Measures BIPM and the US National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST However it is not mentioned in the 9th edition of the official SI standard the BIPM Brochure 2019 or in the NIST version of the same and BIPM officially discourages its use The angstrom is also not included in the European Union s catalogue of units of measure that may be used within its internal market SymbolUnicode codification The third option shall not be used anymore For compatibility reasons Unicode assigns a code point U 212B Å ANGSTROM SIGN for the angstrom symbol which is accessible in HTML as the entity amp angst amp x0212B or amp 8491 However version 5 of the standard already deprecates that code point and has it normalized into the code for the Swedish letter U 00C5 A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE HTML entity amp Aring amp xC5 or amp 197 which should be used instead In older publications where the A glyph was unavailable the unit was sometimes written as A U An example is Bragg s 1921 classical paper on the structure of ice which gives the c and a axis lattice constants as 4 52 A U and 7 34 A U respectively Ambiguously the abbreviation a u may also refer to the atomic unit of length the bohr about 0 53 A or the much larger astronomical unit about 1 5 1011 m See alsoOrders of magnitude length 100 picometres for objects on this scale Conversion of units X unitReferencesOxford University Press 2019 Entry angstrom by Oxford Living Dictionaries online Archived on 2019 03 06 Spellings angstrom aŋstrem and angstrom symbol A Merriam Webster 2024 Entry angstrom in the www merriam webster com Merriam Webster com Dictionary Accessed 2024 01 30 Spelling angstrom ˈaŋ strem ȯŋ strem HarperCollins 2024 Entry angstrom in the Collins English Dictionary online Accessed on 2024 07 26 Spelling angstrom ˈaeŋstrʌm aeŋstrem symbols A A Merriam Webster 1989 Webster s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language Portland House 1989 John C Wells 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd edition ISBN 9781405881180 Peter Roach 2011 Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th edition ISBN 9780521152532 Oxford University Press 1986 Entry Angstrom unit in the Oxford English Dictionary 2nd edition 1986 Archived on 2021 11 22 Spellings Angstrom ɔːŋstrœm capitalized and angstrom lowercase symbols A A U A U Quote The International Angstrom I A was defined in 1907 in terms of the wavelength of cadmium which in standard conditions is 6438 4696 I A When the metre was defined in terms of the wavelength of krypton in 1960 the Angstrom became exactly equal to 10 8 cm International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2006 The International System of Units SI PDF 8th ed p 127 ISBN 92 822 2213 6 archived PDF from the original on 2021 06 04 retrieved 2021 12 16 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 Angstrom doi 10 1351 goldbook N00350 Ambler Thompson and Barry N Taylor 2009 B 8 Factors for Units Listed Alphabetically NIST Guide to the SI National Institutes of Standards and Technology Accessed on 2019 03 02 William H Bragg 1921 The Crystal Structure of Ice Proceedings of the Physical Society of London volume 34 issue 1 page 98 doi 10 1088 1478 7814 34 1 322 Arturas Vailionis 2015 Geometry of Crystals Lecture slides for MatSci162 172 Geometry Stanford University Archived on 2015 03 19 Bureau international des poids et measures 2019 Le systeme international d unites complete brochure 9th edition NIST 2019 Special Publication 330 The International System of Units SI 2019 Edition J A Bearden 1965 Selection of the W Ka as the X Ray Wavelength Standard Physical Review 2nd series volume 137 issue 2B pages 455B B461 doi 10 1103 PhysRev 137 B455 Angstrom A J 1868 Recherches sur le spectre solaire Investigations of the solar spectrum in French Uppsala Sweden W Schultz The 1869 edition printed by Ferdinand Dummler in Berlin contains sketches of the solar spectrum ChemTeam 2024 A Brief Incomplete History of Light and Spectra from the ChemTeam website Accessed on 2024 07 26 Brand John C D 1995 Lines of Light Sources of Dispersive Spectroscopy 1800 1930 CRC Press p 47 ISBN 9782884491631 Albert A Michelson 1895 Determination experimentale de la valeur du metre en longueurs d ondes lumineuses Experimental determination of the value of the meter in terms of the lengths of light waves translated to French by Jean Rene Benoit Travaux et Memoires du Bureau International des Poids et Mesures volume 11 pages 1 85 Quote from p 85 back translated the final conclusion of this work is that the fundamental unit of the metric system is represented by the following numbers of wavelengths of three emissions of cadmium in air at 15 C and at a pressure of 760 mm Red emission 1 m 1553 163 5 lR It follows that the wavelengths of these emissions always at 15 C and at 760 mm are averages of three determinations lR 0 643847 22 m where 1 m 1 10 6 m Jean Rene Benoit Charles Fabry and Alfred Perot 1907 Nouvelle Determination du metre en longueurs d ondes lumineuses A new determination of the metre in terms of the wavelength of light Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l Academie des sciences volume 144 pages 1082 1086 Bureau international des poids et measures 1927 Comptes rendus de la 7e reunion de la Conference generale des poids et mesures Proceedings of the 7th meeting of the General Conference of Weights and Measures pages 85 88 Archived on 2018 11 18 NIST CODATA Committee on Data for Science and Technology 2024 Angstrom star Symbol A Accessed on 2024 07 26 Curtis I Morgan I Hart M Milne A D August 1971 A New Determination of Avogadro s Number In Langenberg D N Taylor B N eds Proceedings of the International Congress on Precision Measurement and Fundamental Constants Report Vol 343 National Bureau of Standards p 285 Council of the European Communities 1979 Council Directive 80 181 EEC of 20 December 1979 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to Unit of measurement and on the repeal of Directive 71 354 EEC Accessed on 2011 09 23 The Unicode Consortium 2021 The Unicode Standard Version 14 0 Chapter 22 2 Letterlike Symbols page 839 ISBN 978 1 936213 29 0 The Unicode Consortium 2008 The Unicode Standard Version 5 0 Chapter 15 Symbols page 493 ISBN 978 0 321 48091 0 International Astronomical Union 2012 Resolution B2 On the re definition of the astronomical unit of length Proceedings of the XXVIII General Assembly of International Astronomical Union Beijing China Quote recommends 5 that the unique symbol au be used for the astronomical unit Oxford Journals 2012 Instructions for Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Archived on 22 October 2012 Quote The units of length distance are A nm mm mm cm m km au light year pc American Astronomical Society 2016 Manuscript Preparation AJ amp ApJ Author Instructions Archived on 2016 02 21 Quote Use standard abbreviations for natural units e g au pc cm External linksLook up angstrom in Wiktionary the free dictionary