Atmospheres to Hectopascals (atm → hPa)

1,013.3

1.0000 atm = 1,013.3 hPa

Formula

1 atm = 1013.25 hPa
HectopascalsAtmospheres (Swap Units)

Conversion Table

atmhPa
00
1.00001,013.3
2.00002,026.5
3.00003,039.8
4.00004,053.0
5.00005,066.3
6.00006,079.5
7.00007,092.8
8.00008,106.0
9.00009,119.3
10.00010,133
11.00011,146
12.00012,159
13.00013,172
14.00014,186
15.00015,199
16.00016,212
17.00017,225
18.00018,239
19.00019,252
atmhPa
20.00020,265
21.00021,278
22.00022,292
23.00023,305
24.00024,318
25.00025,331
26.00026,345
27.00027,358
28.00028,371
29.00029,384
30.00030,398
31.00031,411
32.00032,424
33.00033,437
34.00034,451
35.00035,464
36.00036,477
37.00037,490
38.00038,504
39.00039,517
atmhPa
40.00040,530
41.00041,543
42.00042,557
43.00043,570
44.00044,583
45.00045,596
46.00046,610
47.00047,623
48.00048,636
49.00049,649
50.00050,663
51.00051,676
52.00052,689
53.00053,702
54.00054,716
55.00055,729
56.00056,742
57.00057,755
58.00058,769
59.00059,782
atmhPa
60.00060,795
61.00061,808
62.00062,822
63.00063,835
64.00064,848
65.00065,861
66.00066,875
67.00067,888
68.00068,901
69.00069,914
70.00070,928
71.00071,941
72.00072,954
73.00073,967
74.00074,981
75.00075,994
76.00077,007
77.00078,020
78.00079,034
79.00080,047

Atmospheres to Hectopascals Conversion

Converting Atmospheres (atm) to Hectopascals (hPa) is a common pressure conversion. 1 atm equals 1,013.25 hPa. For example, 100 atm is equal to 101,325 hPa.

Quick Reference Values

1 atm = 1,013.25 hPa. 5 atm = 5,066.25 hPa. 10 atm = 10,132.5 hPa. 25 atm = 25,331.25 hPa. 50 atm = 50,662.5 hPa. 100 atm = 101,325 hPa.

What is Atmospheres?

Atmospheres (atm) is a unit of pressure. One atmosphere (atm) is a unit of pressure defined as exactly 101,325 pascals (Pa). It approximates the average air pressure at sea level on Earth. The atmosphere unit is used for expressing pressures in meteorology and engineering [iso-80000]. The atmosphere was originally defined in the 19th century based on average sea-level air pressure. It was standardized by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) and other bodies to equal 101,325 Pa in the mid-20th century [nist-sp-811]. Atmospheres are used worldwide in scientific fields, including chemistry and physics, and in engineering applications like pressure vessel design. It is less common in everyday use outside these fields [nist-sp-811].

What is Hectopascals?

Hectopascals (hPa) is a unit of pressure. The hectopascal is a unit of pressure equal to 100 pascals. It is defined as exactly 100 newtons per square meter (100 N/m²), where the pascal (Pa) is the SI derived unit of pressure. The hectopascal is widely used in meteorology for atmospheric pressure measurements and aligns with the SI system as per international standards [bipm-si-brochure]. The pascal unit was named after Blaise Pascal and officially adopted by the General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM) in 1971. The hectopascal emerged as a convenient multiple used in meteorology to represent atmospheric pressure values in the 20th century [cgpm-resolutions]. Hectopascals are standard in weather reports worldwide, especially in Europe, Asia, and Australia. The US National Weather Service uses millibars, numerically equivalent to hectopascals, for atmospheric pressure. It is recognized by ISO 80000 as a unit of pressure [iso-80000].

Common Misspellings

People often search for this conversion using these alternate spellings: atmosphers, atmosfere, atmospere, atmospherics, hecto pascals, hecto-pascals, hecto pascal, hec topascal. All of these refer to the Atmospheres to Hectopascals conversion.

Common Conversions