Instant · Precise · Universal
47 units available
6 categories total
To liters: multiply by 10¹⁸. To km³: multiply by 10⁶. To petaliters: multiply by 1,000.
1 EL = 10¹⁸ L = 10¹⁵ m³ = 10⁶ km³ = 1,000 PL.
For example, 1 Exaliter (EL) = 1000000000 Gigaliter (GL).
| Exaliter (EL) | Gigaliter (GL) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 100000000 |
| 0.5 | 500000000 |
| 1 | 1000000000 |
| 2 | 2000000000 |
| 5 | 5000000000 |
| 10 | 10000000000 |
| 25 | 25000000000 |
| 50 | 50000000000 |
| 100 | 100000000000 |
| 500 | 500000000000 |
| 1000 | 1.000000e+12 |
The exaliter is a unit of volume equal to 10¹⁸ liters, or one million cubic kilometers.
1 EL = 10¹⁸ L = 10¹⁵ m³ = 10⁶ km³ = 1,000 PL.
To liters: multiply by 10¹⁸. To km³: multiply by 10⁶. To petaliters: multiply by 1,000.
No practical applications — this scale exists only for astronomical and theoretical comparisons.
All the water on Earth (oceans, ice, groundwater, lakes, rivers, atmosphere) totals about 1.386 EL.
Almost never encountered, so mistakes are rare. The main risk is confusion with other 'E' prefixes (e.g., eV in energy).
Think of the exaliter as the 'planet volume' unit. Earth's oceans ≈ 1.335 EL. Prefix: exa = 10¹⁸ = quintillion.
The gigaliter is a unit of volume equal to one billion liters (10⁹ L), or one million cubic meters.
1 GL = 10⁹ L = 10⁶ m³ = 1,000 ML. One teraliter = 1,000 GL.
To liters: multiply by 10⁹. To cubic meters: multiply by 10⁶. To megalliters: multiply by 1,000.
Reporting dam capacities (e.g., Hoover Dam stores ~35 GL), regional water budgets, and flood volumes.
Sydney Harbour holds approximately 500 GL of water. Lake Mead (behind Hoover Dam) has a capacity of about 35,200 GL.
Underestimating the scale — 1 GL = one billion liters = one million cubic meters. It is an enormous volume.
Think 'giga = billion.' 1 GL would fill 400 Olympic pools. It's the unit for dams and large reservoirs.



© 2026 UntangleTools. All Rights Reserved.