What is a micron?

The nitty-gritty of digital camera sensors takes things down to the micron. For example the width of photosites on a sensor is measured in microns, more commonly represented using the unit µm, e.g. 3.71µm. But what is a micron?

Various sensor photosite sizes compared to spider silk (size is exaggerated of course).

Basically a micron is a micrometre, a metric unit of measure for length equal to 0.001 mm (or 1/1000mm). I mean it’s small, like really small. To put it also into perspective table salt has a particle size of 120µm. Human hair has an average diameter of 70µm, milled flour can be anywhere in the range 25-200µm, and spider silk is a measly 3µm.

To put it another way, for a photosite that is 3.88µm in size, we could fit 257 of them in just 1mm of space.