Circular mil

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A circular mil is a unit of area, equal to the area of a circle with a diameter of one mil (one thousandth of an inch or 1/1000 in). It corresponds to approximately. It is a unit intended for referring to the area of a wire with a circular cross section. As the definition of the unit contains, it is easy to calculate area values in circular mils when the diameter in mils is known.
The area in circular mils,, of a circle with a diameter of  mils, is given by the formula: {A}_(cmil) = {d}_(mil)².
In Canada and the United States, the Canadian Electrical Code (CEC) and the National Electrical Code (NEC), respectively, use the circular mil to define wire sizes larger than 0000 AWG. In many NEC publications and uses, large wires may be expressed in thousands of circular mils, which is abbreviated in two different ways: kcmil or MCM. For example, one common wire size used in the NEC has a conductor diameter of 0.5 inches, or 500 mils, and thus a cross-section of 500² = 250, 000 circular mils, written as 250 kcmil or 250 MCM, which is the first size larger than 0000 AWG used within the NEC.
1000 circular mil equals approximately, so for many purposes, a ratio of 2 MCM ≈ 1 mm² can be used with negligible (1.3%) error.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_mil
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