Convert Nanometer (nm) to Dekameter (dam) instantly.
Nanometer to Dekameter conversion
1 Nanometer (nm) = 1e-10 Dekameter (dam). To convert Nanometer to Dekameter, multiply the value by 1e-10.
| Nanometer (nm) | Dekameter (dam) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 1e-10 |
| 2 | 2e-10 |
| 5 | 5e-10 |
| 10 | 1e-9 |
| 25 | 2.5e-9 |
| 50 | 5e-9 |
| 100 | 1e-8 |
| 1000 | 1e-7 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Dekameter are in one Nanometer?
One Nanometer (nm) equals 1e-10 Dekameter (dam).
How do I convert Nanometer to Dekameter?
To convert Nanometer to Dekameter, multiply the value by 1e-10.
What is 10 Nanometer in Dekameter?
10 Nanometer = 1e-9 Dekameter.
About these units
Nanometer (nm)
A nanometer—one billionth of a meter (10⁻⁹ m)—is central to nanoscience, nanotechnology, and molecular biology. Many structures essential to life fall into this scale: DNA's double helix is about 2 nm wide, viruses often measure tens to hundreds of nanometers, and key cell structures like ribosomes are on the order of 20–30 nm. In engineering, nanometers define the dimensions of modern semiconductor technology. Silicon transistors have shrunk to features only a few nanometers wide, approaching the physical limits of electron behavior in solid-state materials. In optics, wavelengths of ultraviolet light can be expressed in nanometers, as can surface roughness, material grain sizes, and thin-film coatings. The nanometer is ubiquitous across modern science because it describes both biological and technological structures at the frontier of research.
Dekameter (dam)
A dekameter (sometimes spelled "decameter"), equal to ten meters, is another unit in the metric system that is infrequently used in everyday life. Its primary applications arise in surveying, topographic mapping, and environmental science. When measuring the heights of waves, depth increments in lakes, or widths of natural features like river channels, the dekameter provides a convenient scale—large enough to avoid cumbersome numbers yet small enough to maintain meaningful detail. While modern GPS and digital mapping tools often use meters directly, the dekameter persists in specialty fields that value standardized interval measurements. For example, contour intervals on geographic maps may be expressed in dekameters for uniformity. The unit's relative obscurity reflects the public's preference for units with intuitive relevance (like meters and kilometers), but its presence is nonetheless important in systematic metric progression.