Convert Square Millimeter to Hectare (mm² → ha)
The square millimeter is the precision area unit for electronics, microfabrication, and component cross-sections.
Square Millimeter to Hectare Conversion Table
10 common values| Square Millimeter | Hectare |
|---|---|
| 1 mm² | 1 × 10^-10 ha |
| 5 mm² | 5 × 10^-10 ha |
| 10 mm² | 1 × 10^-9 ha |
| 50 mm² | 5 × 10^-9 ha |
| 100 mm² | 1 × 10^-8 ha |
| 500 mm² | 5 × 10^-8 ha |
| 1,000 mm² | 1e-7 ha |
| 5,000 mm² | 5e-7 ha |
| 10,000 mm² | 0.000001 ha |
| 50,000 mm² | 0.000005 ha |
How to Convert Square Millimeter to Hectare Manually
Step by StepConverting square millimeters to hectares is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in square millimetersStart with the number of square millimeters (mm²) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 1 × 10^-10The conversion factor from mm² to ha is 1 × 10^-10. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in hectaresThe result is your value in hectares (ha).
Formula
Multiply the value in square millimeters by 1 × 10^-10. For the reverse direction, multiply by 10,000,000,000.
ha = mm² × 1 × 10^-10mm² = ha × 10,000,000,000Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 mm² = 0.01 cm² = 10⁻⁶ m².
- Electrical cables: 1 mm² up to 10 A; 2.5 mm² up to 16 A (EU standards).
- Always convert to m² for large structures; mm² for precision parts.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Using mm² instead of cm² for medium-sized surfaces — clutters figures.
- Confusing mm² with mm — different dimensions.
- Assuming a cable rated at 1.5 mm² is 1.5 mm wide — it is the conductive cross-section.
About Square Millimeter and Hectare
What is the Square Millimeter?
The square millimeter equals one millionth of a square meter (10⁻⁶ m²) and is the precision area unit for electronics, microfabrication, mechanical engineering, and component cross-sections. Wire gauges in electronics specify cross-sectional area in mm² (a 2.5 mm² wire is standard for household lighting circuits). Computer chip die sizes and printed circuit board footprints are measured in mm². The square millimeter relates to the square centimeter (100 mm² = 1 cm²), the square meter (1,000,000 mm² = 1 m²), and the square inch (1 mm² ≈ 0.00155 in²). Engineering tolerances, microscope-image areas, and laser-spot sizes all use this scale. The square millimeter is critical in stress calculations: pressure (N/mm²) and strength (MPa) calculations in mechanical engineering routinely use this unit.
- Electrical cable cross-section (e.g. 2.5 mm² copper)
- Microelectronics and semiconductor areas
- Pharmaceutical tablet surface areas
Typical household wiring is 2.5 mm² copper. A grain of rice covers about 10 mm². A pin head is under 1 mm².
What is the Hectare?
The hectare equals exactly 10,000 square meters (100 m × 100 m) and is the international standard area unit for agricultural land, forestry, and large land development. Adopted as part of the metric system in 1795, the hectare's name combines 'hect-' (one hundred) with 'are' (the basic metric land unit of 100 m²) — meaning 100 ares. A standard FIFA football pitch covers about 0.7 hectares, and Central Park in New York is approximately 341 hectares. Farms across Europe, Latin America, Africa, and Asia are sized in hectares (a small family farm might be 5–20 ha). The hectare relates to the square meter (1 ha = 10,000 m²), the square kilometer (100 ha = 1 km²), the acre (1 ha ≈ 2.471 acres), and the square mile (1 ha ≈ 0.00386 mi²). It is one of the few non-SI units accepted for use with SI for legal land measurement.
- European farm, vineyard and orchard size
- Forestry and conservation land
- Large construction projects and urban development
A rugby pitch is 1 hectare. A Bordeaux vineyard parcel is typically 5–10 ha. The Vatican City covers 44 ha.