The total volume of the oceans is about 1,347,000,000 cubic kilometres which is 322,280,000 cubic miles.
328 million cubic miles.
70%
330,000,000
it is 2 percent of the total volume of atmosphere, therefore 2/100*51,006,560,000,000 cubic metres (m^3) =1.0201312 x10 ^12m^3
The total volume of water on Earth is estimated at 1.386 billion km³ (333 million cubic miles). About 97.5% of water on Earth is salt water and 2.5% fresh water. Of the 2.5% fresh water, only 0.3% is in liquid form on the surface.
Roughly 326 million cubic miles, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Some 72 percent of Earth is covered in water, but 97 percent of that is salty and no good for drinking.326,000,000,000,000,000,000 gallons.
required air is approx 12 cubic feet of air per cubic feet of natural gas fro propane it will be approx 19 cubic feet of air
According to the USGS and NOAA, a 1km³ cumulus cloud would weigh about 2.21 billion pounds, or about 1,105 tons (US). The same volume of dry air weighs about 2.22 billion pounds, which is why clouds float. Because it is less dense than air, in truth, it doesn't "weigh" anything. It has volume. If you sucked all the water vapor out of the air and put it in a bucket, though, using the below chart as a guide and the fact that water is 1kg per liter, and one liter of water is 0.1 cubic meters, you'd have 12,900,000,000 liters of water, which is 12.9 trillion kg. (It's enough to cover the earth's 510,072,000 km² surface with about 25mm of water. Because the earth's average rain fall is about 1 meter, you can figure that all of this water vapor is recycled every nine or ten days.) So, to convert that metric to US tons and answer your question, all of that means that there is approximately more than 14.2 billion US tons of water vapor in the atmosphere. Water sourceWater volume, in cubic milesWater volume, in cubic kilometersPercent of total freshwaterPercent of total waterAtmosphere3,09412,9000.04%0.001%Total global fresh water8,404,00035,030,000100%2.5%Total global water332,500,0001,386,000,000--100%Source: Gleick, P. H., 1996: Water resources. In Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather, ed. by S. H. Schneider, Oxford University Press, New York, vol. 2, pp.817-823.
The Earth's total amount of water has a volume of about 344 million cubic miles. 97% or 333.68 million cubic miles of this is seawater. Of the 3% or 10.32 million cubic miles left as fresh water, some 2% or 6.88 million cubic miles of the total is frozen.
The core consists of an inner solid core with a radius of 760 miles, and an outer liquid core with a total diameter of 1400 miles. Applying the 4/3pi(r3) volume formula to these values we get: 1.8 billion cubic miles for the solid core and 11.7 billion cubic miles for the total outer and inner core volume. This compares to a total volume for the earth of 32.5 billion cubic miles.
The Earth has more water than land area. The Earth's estimated total volume of water is 1.386 billion cubic kilometer or 333 million cubic miles.
The total volume of water on earth is 1.3 billion cubic kilometers. This is equal to 310 million cubic miles.total weight of water on earth is 1.4x1021kg.1 kg is approx equal to 1L of water,so approx 1.4x1021L of water.
Water volume, in cubic miles Percent of total water Oceans, Seas, & Bays 321,000,000
The approximate total water volume of all the oceans is 321,000,000 cubic miles. This is not exact due to the fact that the ocean floor has mountains and other terrain that are not fully mapped out.
The total volume of water on Earth is estimated at 1.386 billion km³ (333 million cubic miles). About 97.5% of water on Earth is salt water and 2.5% fresh water. Of the 2.5% fresh water, only 0.3% is in liquid form on the surface.
If the shape is a cuboid, then the volume is 4 cubic centimetres.
1,000 millilitres 1,000 cubic centimetres 0.001 cubic metres
CC is Cubic Centimeters, an unit of volume by itself. It can be either swept or total volume depending on circumstances.
The total volume of all the cylinders would be the cubic inch (cid) or cubic centimeter (cc) displacement of that particular engine.
the total amount of water in the earth is decreasing.Answero:The amunt of water on EArth is essentially constant. It is however not in the same location or quality over time. Water evaporates from tohe oceans, becomes contaminated in the soil, precipitates ot as ice and snw for long term storage, is created by fires, relased by volcanoes and disappears into the groundwater aquifers.