1 E+9 m³
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To help compare different orders of magnitudes this page lists volumes between 1 and 10 cubic kilometres (
to
cubic metres). See also volumes or capacities of other orders of magnitude.
- Volumes smaller than 1 billion (a thousand million) cubic metres
- 1 E+9 m³ or 109 m3 equals:
- 1 billion m3 (1 milliard m3 in long scale terminology, one thousand million cubic metres)
- 1 km3 (cubic kilometre), hence a cube of this volume has an edge of 1,000 m
- 0.2399127586 cubic mile
- A sphere of this volume has a radius of 620.350491 m
- 1.2 billion m3 — approximate volume of rock ejected during the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens
- 1.3 billion m3 — volume of Lake Biel, Switzerland
- 2.5 billion m3 — volume of Lake Walen, Switzerland
- 3.2 billion m3 — volume of Lake Zug
- 3.9 billion m3 — volume of Lake Zürich
- 4,168,181,825 m3 — one cubic mile
- 5 billion m3 — volume of crude oil consumed by the world in a year
- 5.17 billion m3 — volume of Lake Brienz
- 5.2 billion m3 — volume of the artificial Gatun Lake (Panama Canal)
- 6.5 billion m3 — volume of Lake Thun
- 6.5 billion m3 — volume of Lake Lugano
- Volumes larger than or equal to 10 billion (ten thousand million) cubic metres