To determine how many kilolitres of water would fill a 108-meter pool, we need to know the pool's width and depth. Assuming a standard depth of 2 meters and a width of, for example, 5 meters, the volume would be 108 m (length) × 5 m (width) × 2 m (depth) = 1,080 cubic meters. Since 1 kilolitre equals 1 cubic meter, the pool would hold 1,080 kilolitres of water. Adjust the width and depth to get the specific volume for different pool dimensions.
108 kL
It would take 64 m3 of water, which is 64000 liters or about 16,907 gallons.
A cubic meter of water is equivalent to 1000 liters. The typical bathtub holds around 150-200 liters of water, so a cubic meter of water could fill about 5-7 baths.
10*10*0.8 = 80 m3
WaterConcreteDirtNatural gasGrainPetrol
One cubic meter contains 264.2 US gallons of water OR 220 UK gallons of water.
When you earn more medals, you can fill up your prestige meter
1000000 square millimeters fill 1 square meter.
A mole of water molecules would just about fill a teaspoon.
You fill the meter on Build-a-Bearville, by taking care of your pet, and filling it's needs.
One thousand liters of water can fill a space measuring 1 cubic meter (or 1,000 liters). This volume is equivalent to a standard large bathtub, which typically holds around 150-200 liters, so 1,000 liters could fill approximately five to seven bathtubs. Additionally, it could fill a small backyard pool or a large aquarium, depending on the dimensions.
Fill it with water; it sinks. Fill it with air, it rises.