What Is This Tool?
This converter allows you to change length values from the classical electron radius scale to the Bohr radius scale, connecting classical scattering lengths and atomic unit distances relevant in physics and chemistry.
How to Use This Tool?
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Enter the value in Electron radius (classical) you want to convert
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Select the target unit as Bohr radius [b, a.u.]
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Click the convert button to obtain the equivalent length
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Review the output, which reflects the conversion based on the defined formula
Key Features
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Converts Electron radius (classical) values to Bohr radius (atomic units)
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Browser-based and easy to use without software installation
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Supports unit conversions relevant for physics, quantum chemistry, and computational modeling
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Displays results based on the exact conversion rate between the two units
Examples
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1 Electron radius (classical) = 0.0000532514 Bohr radius
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1000 Electron radius (classical) = 0.0532514 Bohr radius
Common Use Cases
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Relating classical scattering lengths to atomic-scale distances in quantum chemistry
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Facilitating computations in quantum physics and atomic structure calculations
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Supporting modeling tasks in particle physics, plasma physics, and astrophysics
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Simplifying expressions in spectroscopy and scattering problems using atomic units
Tips & Best Practices
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Understand that the classical electron radius is a characteristic scale, not a direct physical size
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Use conversions to bridge classical and quantum scales carefully in modeling
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Verify units before calculations to ensure correct application in physics and chemistry contexts
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Be mindful of potential limitations in numerical accuracy at very small scales
Limitations
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The classical electron radius is not a literal physical size but a characteristic scattering length
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Conversions represent relationships between different physical context length scales rather than exact distances
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Numerical precision may affect highly precise simulations at atomic or subatomic dimensions
Frequently Asked Questions
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What does the classical electron radius represent?
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It is a derived length scale representing where the classical electrostatic self-energy equals the electron rest energy and serves as a scattering length scale.
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Why convert from Electron radius (classical) to Bohr radius?
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This conversion helps relate classical electromagnetic scattering measurements to atomic units used in quantum chemistry and physics calculations.
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Can the classical electron radius be considered the physical size of an electron?
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No, it is a characteristic scale used in calculations but does not represent the actual size of the electron.
Key Terminology
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Electron radius (classical)
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A derived length scale representing the classical electrostatic self-energy of a charge equal to the electron rest energy, used as a characteristic scattering length.
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Bohr radius [b, a.u.]
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The atomic unit of length equivalent to the most probable distance between the nucleus and electron in hydrogen's ground state, used in atomic and quantum physics.