0.00058 milliohms
First of all, let's get the units of measurement correct, which are kilohms (not 'kil ohms'), megohms(not 'magha ohms'), milliohms, and picohms(not 'pico ohms').Resistors are generally rated in ohms, kilohms, and megohms because, generally, these are the values most widely needed in practical applications.
S = 1/R Where S = Conductance in Siemens R = Resistance in Ohms If R is in Mega Ohms, S will be in Micro Siemens
(3 x 103) x (3 x 10-6) = 0.009 squared ohms ... a quantity with no physical significance
m (milli) ohm = 1/1000 ohmµ (micro) ohm = 1/1000000 ohmn (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000 ohmp (nano) ohm = 1/1000000000000 ohm
mohm stands for milli ohms, each mohm is a 1/100 of an ohm.
Micro- = 1/1000000 milli- = 1/1000 micro < milli ■
Since "milli" means "thousandth", there are 150 milliohms in 0.15 ohms.
1.2
Cemicro and demicro
First of all, let's get the units of measurement correct, which are kilohms (not 'kil ohms'), megohms(not 'magha ohms'), milliohms, and picohms(not 'pico ohms').Resistors are generally rated in ohms, kilohms, and megohms because, generally, these are the values most widely needed in practical applications.
The prefix micro means 10^-6 = 0.000 001. So 6107 micro ohms are 0.006 107 ohms or 6.107 x 10^-3 ohms. Scroll down to related links and look for the prefix "micro" and "all prefixes".
The next smallest prefix from milli- is micro-. Milli- denotes thousandths, micro- denotes millionths.
The metric system prefix for the quantity 0.001 is Milli.
0.0075*10,000
These are all prefixes to root words. Mega = 1000000, kilo = 1000, milli = .0001, micro = .0000001
Yes, Micro is a metric unit. It is between milli and nano.
Centi- = one hundredth Milli- = one thousandth Micro- = one millionth