Convert link (US survey) to Electron radius (classical) Online | Free Length Converter

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Link (US Survey)


The US survey link is a unit of length used in the United States for land surveying, defined as exactly 7.92 US survey inches. Since one US survey inch is slightly longer than the international inch (due to the US survey foot), the US survey link is approximately 0.201168 meters.


It is part of the US survey system, derived from Gunter’s chain, which is divided into 100 links per chain (66 US survey feet). Links are used to measure small distances in surveying and land measurement.


Key facts:



  • 1 US survey link = 7.92 US survey inches



  • 1 US survey link ≈ 0.201168 meters



  • 100 links = 1 US survey chain (66 US survey feet)



  • 25 links = 1 US survey rod (16.5 US survey feet)



Though the US survey units are being phased out, the US survey link still appears in historical land records and legal surveying documents.



Classical Electron Radius


The classical electron radius is a theoretical length scale associated with the electron, derived from classical electromagnetism. It represents the size of a hypothetical sphere where the electron’s electrostatic energy equals its rest mass energy.



  • Its value is approximately 2.818 × 10⁻¹⁵ meters (about 2.8 femtometers).



  • Calculated using fundamental constants: the electron charge, mass, and the speed of light.



  • It is not the actual physical size of the electron (which is considered point-like in quantum mechanics), but a useful scale in classical physics.



  • Used in scattering theory and classical electron models.



Key facts:



  • Classical electron radius ≈ 2.818 × 10⁻¹⁵ m



  • Represents an electromagnetic length scale, not a physical size



  • Important in classical models of electron behavior



This radius helps bridge classical and quantum views of particle physics.



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