Convert Joule to Therm (J → thm)
The joule is the base SI energy unit, used in physics, mechanical engineering, and nutritional labeling worldwide.
Joule to Therm Conversion Table
10 common values| Joule | Therm |
|---|---|
| 1 J | 9.478 × 10^-9 thm |
| 10 J | 9.478 × 10^-8 thm |
| 100 J | 9.478e-7 thm |
| 500 J | 0.000004739 thm |
| 1,000 J | 0.000009478 thm |
| 5,000 J | 0.00004739 thm |
| 10,000 J | 0.00009478 thm |
| 50,000 J | 0.000474 thm |
| 100,000 J | 0.000948 thm |
| 500,000 J | 0.004739 thm |
How to Convert Joule to Therm Manually
Step by StepConverting joules to therms is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.
- 1Take your value in joulesStart with the number of joules (J) you want to convert.
- 2Multiply by 9.478 × 10^-9The conversion factor from J to thm is 9.478 × 10^-9. Multiply your value by this number.
- 3Read the result in thermsThe result is your value in therms (thm).
Formula
Multiply the value in joules by 9.478 × 10^-9. For the reverse direction, multiply by 105,505,590.
thm = J × 9.478 × 10^-9J = thm × 105,505,590Tips
Use these in everyday conversions- 1 J = 1 N·m = 1 W·s.
- 1 kWh = 3,600,000 J (3.6 MJ).
- For nutrition 1 kcal = 4.184 kJ.
Common Mistakes
Avoid these- Confusing joule (energy) with newton (force).
- Mixing joule with watt — watt is joule per second.
- Using kJ when labels call for kcal on US nutrition.
About Joule and Therm
What is the Joule?
The joule is the SI unit of energy, work, and heat, named after English physicist James Prescott Joule (1818–1889). Defined as the energy transferred when a force of one newton acts over a distance of one meter (1 J = 1 N·m), the joule unifies mechanical work, electrical energy (1 J = 1 watt-second = 1 V·C), and thermal energy. A typical apple has about 250,000 joules of chemical energy when metabolized, lifting an apple 1 meter requires roughly 1 joule of mechanical work, and a single joule could light a 1-watt LED for one second. The joule is fundamental in physics, mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, and nutrition (European food labels show kilojoules). It relates to the kilojoule (1 kJ = 1,000 J), the calorie (1 cal = 4.184 J), the watt-hour (1 Wh = 3,600 J), and the BTU (1 BTU ≈ 1,055 J). Modern definitions of the kilogram and the Kelvin both reference the joule.
- Physics and engineering calculations
- Scientific nutrition measurement (European labels)
- Impact energy in engineering (Charpy test)
Lifting a 100 g apple 1 m: ≈ 1 J. 100 kcal snack: 418,400 J. Hand grenade: ~650 kJ.
What is the Therm?
The therm equals exactly 100,000 BTU (or about 105.5 megajoules) and is the standard unit for natural-gas billing in the United States and the United Kingdom. Gas utilities deliver therms (or 'CCF' — hundred cubic feet, approximately 1 therm of natural gas). A typical US home uses 50–100 therms per month for heating in winter. The therm is also used in industrial process heating and commercial gas pricing. UK natural gas was historically sold in therms before metric conversion, and the unit persists in legacy contracts. The therm relates to the BTU (100,000 BTU = 1 therm), the megajoule (1 therm ≈ 105.5 MJ), the kilowatt-hour (1 therm ≈ 29.3 kWh), and the cubic foot of natural gas (about 100 ft³ ≈ 1 therm at standard heating value). Most metric countries bill natural gas in cubic meters or kilowatt-hours instead.
- US residential gas bills
- UK commercial gas billing
- Industrial natural-gas contracts
UK home heating: 200–500 therms/year. 1 therm = about $1.50 US (2024) or £1.00 UK.