Milliliter to Cubic decameter
ml
dam³
Conversion History
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|---|---|---|
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Quick Reference Table (Milliliter to Cubic decameter)
| Milliliter (ml) | Cubic decameter (dam³) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.000000001 |
| 5 | 0.000000005 |
| 10 | 0.00000001 |
| 30 | 0.00000003 |
| 100 | 0.0000001 |
| 250 | 0.00000025 |
| 500 | 0.0000005 |
About Milliliter (ml)
A milliliter (mL) is one thousandth of a liter (0.001 L), exactly equal to one cubic centimeter (1 cm³). It is the most widely used small volume unit in medicine, cooking, and science. Drug dosages are prescribed in milliliters, soft drink cans are 330 mL, and laboratory pipettes measure in mL. The milliliter bridges the gap between the impractically small microliter and the everyday liter, making it the default unit for liquid measurement in clinical and domestic settings worldwide.
A standard medicine syringe holds 1–20 mL. A teaspoon is approximately 5 mL. A typical espresso shot is 30 mL.
Etymology: From Latin "mille" (thousand) + "liter". The prefix milli- denotes 10⁻³ in the SI system.
About Cubic decameter (dam³)
A cubic decameter (dam³) is the volume of a cube with 10-meter sides, equal to one million liters (1,000 m³). It is used in hydrology, reservoir capacity measurement, and large-scale water management. Though rarely seen in everyday life, it is equivalent to the megaliter (ML) used by water utilities. One cubic decameter of water has a mass of approximately one million kilograms (1,000 tonnes). An Olympic swimming pool holds about 2.5 dam³.
A standard Olympic swimming pool holds about 2.5 dam³ (2,500 m³). A small municipal reservoir might hold 10–100 dam³.
Milliliter – Frequently Asked Questions
How many milliliters are in a teaspoon?
One US teaspoon equals approximately 4.93 mL, conventionally rounded to 5 mL in cooking and medicine. An Australian/metric teaspoon is exactly 5 mL. A tablespoon is 15 mL (3 teaspoons).
Why do medicine bottles say "do not use household spoons" for dosing?
Household teaspoons and tablespoons vary wildly — from 3 to 7 mL for a "teaspoon" depending on the design. A parent dosing 2.5 mL of infant paracetamol with a large decorative spoon might accidentally give double the intended dose. Studies have shown dosing errors of 20–50% when using kitchen cutlery. Calibrated oral syringes (marked in 0.1 mL increments) eliminate this problem entirely, which is why the AAP and WHO both recommend them over any spoon for liquid medications.
How many milliliters are in a standard drink can?
A standard soft drink or beer can is typically 330 mL in Europe and 355 mL (12 US fl oz) in the United States. A 500 mL can is common for beer in many markets.
What is a standard medical dose in mL?
Common oral liquid medications are dosed at 2.5, 5, or 10 mL. Injectable medications may be 0.1–2 mL. IV fluid bags are typically 100, 250, 500, or 1,000 mL.
How many milliliters are in a fluid ounce?
One US fluid ounce equals approximately 29.57 mL. One imperial (UK) fluid ounce equals approximately 28.41 mL. The two are close but not identical — important for recipes crossing US and UK sources.
Cubic decameter – Frequently Asked Questions
What is a cubic decameter?
A cubic decameter (dam³) is the volume of a cube with 10-meter sides, equal to 1,000 cubic meters or one million liters. It is equivalent to a megaliter (ML) and is used in hydrology and water resource management.
How many liters are in a cubic decameter?
One cubic decameter equals exactly 1,000,000 liters (one megaliter). Since 1 dam = 10 m, 1 dam³ = 10³ m³ = 1,000 m³ = 1,000,000 liters.
Is a cubic decameter the same as a megaliter?
Yes, 1 dam³ = 1 ML = 1,000,000 liters. Both terms are used in hydrology; megaliter is more common in water utility reporting, while cubic decameter appears in formal scientific notation.
Where is the cubic decameter used?
Cubic decameters are used in water resource engineering, reservoir capacity reporting, and irrigation system design. Countries with large-scale irrigation infrastructure — such as Australia, India, and the US — commonly report water allocations in megaliters (= dam³).
How does a cubic decameter compare to an Olympic swimming pool?
An Olympic swimming pool holds 2,500 m³ = 2.5 dam³. So one cubic decameter is 40% of an Olympic pool. Large water reservoirs are typically measured in hundreds to thousands of cubic decameters.