
One cubic metre of
concrete (representing the world annual production per inhabitant)
The 'cubic metre' (symbol 'm³') is the
SI derived unit of
volume. It is the volume of a
cube with edges one
metre in
length. In the United States it is spelled "'cubic meter'." An alternate name, which allowed a different usage with
SI prefixes, was the 'stère'. Another alternate name, not widely used anymore, is the 'kilolitre', spelled '' in the United States.
Conversions
Main articles: Unit conversion
1 cubic metre is equivalent to:
★ 1,000
litres (exactly); 1 litre = 0.001 m³ (exactly)
★ ~35.3
cubic feet (approximately); 1 cubic foot (1 ft3)= 0.028 316 846 592 m³ (exactly)
★ ~1.31
cubic yards (approximately); 1 cubic yard = 0.764 554 857 984 m³ (exactly)
★ ~6.29
oil barrels (approximately); 1 barrel = 0.158 987 294 928 m³ (exactly)
A cubic metre of pure
water at the temperature of maximum density (3.98
°C) and standard
atmospheric pressure (101.325 kPa) has a
mass of 1000
kg, or one
tonne. At 0 °C, the freezing point of water, it is slightly less, 999.972 kg.
It is sometimes abbreviated '
cu m', '
m3', '
m^3' or '
m
★
★ 3' when
superscript characters or
markup are not available/accessible (i.e. in some typewritten documents and postings in
Usenet newsgroups).
Abbreviated 'CBM' in the
freight business and 'MTQ' (or numeric code 49) in international trade.
Multiples and submultiples
Main articles: SI prefix
See
1 E-3 m³ for a comparison with other volumes.
Multiples
★ A 'cubic dekametre (
dam³)' is 1 000 cubic metres, and is equal to the volume of a cube of side length 1 dekametre (10 metres).
★ A 'cubic hectometre' ('
hm³') is the volume equal to that of a cube of side length 1 hectometre (100 metres). 1 hm³ is '1 000 X 10
6 liters' (see
Giga litre). 1 000 cubic dekametres is 1 cubic hectometre (hm³) and 1 000 cubic hectometres is 1 cubic kilometre (km³).
★ A 'cubic kilometre' ('
km³') is the volume equal to that of a cube of side length 1 kilometre.
Submultiples
★ A 'cubic decimetre' ('dm³') is the volume of a cube of side length 1 decimetre (0.1 metre). 1 cubic decimetre is equal to '1
litre'.
★
★ From 1901 to 1964 the litre was defined as the volume of 1 kilogram of pure
water at 4 degrees
Celsius and 760
millimetres of mercury pressure. During this time, a litre was about 1.000028 dm
3. In 1964 the original definition was reverted to.
★ A 'cubic centimetre' ('cm³') is equal to the volume of a cube with side length of 1 centimetre. It was the base unit of volume of the
CGS system of units, and is a legitimate SI unit. It is equal to a millilitre ('ml').
★
★ The colloquial abbreviations 'cc' and 'ccm' are not SI but are common in some contexts. It is a verbal shorthand for "cubic centimetre". For example 'cc' is commonly used for denoting
displacement of
car and
motorbike engines "the
Mini Cooper had a 1275 cc engine". In medicine 'cc' is also common, for example "100 cc of blood loss".
★ A 'cubic millimetre' ('mm³') is the volume equal to that of a cube with edges of 1 millimetre. It is equal to a microlitre ('µl').