To calculate the volume of water needed to fill a swimming pool, you can use the formula for the volume of a rectangular prism: Volume = length × width × depth. If the pool is m meters long, m meters wide, and m meters deep, the volume would be m × m × m = m³. Since 1 cubic meter is equivalent to 1,000 liters, you would need m³ × 1,000 liters of water to fill the pool.
To calculate the volume of water in a rectangular swimming pool, you would use the formula: volume = length x width x depth. Assuming a standard depth of around 4 feet, the volume of water in a swimming pool that is 32 feet long and 9 feet wide would be approximately 1,152 cubic feet. This is equivalent to around 8,624 gallons or 32,604 liters of water.
You don't really need to measure the water in a birdbath, just put some in a couple inches deep.
The swimming pool in Beijing Water cube is 13 metres deep
About 49,246.3 liters of water.
It would take 64 m3 of water, which is 64000 liters or about 16,907 gallons.
Around 22,870 liters of water.
Liter is measure of volume, not distance. How deep it goes depends on how big area you spread it over. 100 liters in a regular-sized bathtub would be about half full. 100 liters in a pool might just get the bottom wet.
About 39,397 liters.
About 129,715 liters.
About 45,025 liters.
Figure out how many cubic meters it holds. A cubic meter is 1000 liters, so go from there.
That depends on what body of water you are swimming into. In most cases, swimming in a deep river or deep lake can get you drowned in the water because it is so large and unclear. If it is a pool, then it is ok because you can see clearly and a lot of athletics can swim in pools as much as 50 ft deep.