Understanding Acre-Feet to Cubic meters Conversion
The acre-foot is a large unit of volume used mainly in the US for water resources, equal to the volume of one acre of surface covered to a depth of one foot (about 1,233 cubic metres). The cubic meter is the SI derived unit of volume, equal to the space occupied by a cube one metre on each side. Converting acre-feet to cubic meters is useful whenever you need to express the same volume quantity in a different measurement system, such as planning water storage, irrigation, and reservoir capacity where large volumes are involved.
Conversion Formula
To convert a value from acre-feet to cubic meters, multiply by the fixed conversion factor:
In other words, multiply the number of acre-feet by to obtain the equivalent number of cubic meters.
Step-by-Step Example
Convert acre-feet to cubic meters.
- Write the formula:
- Substitute the value:
- Calculate:
So .
How to Convert Acre-Feet to Cubic meters
Converting acre-feet to cubic meters takes just one multiplication once you know the factor. Here is how to convert as an example.
- Write the conversion factor. One acre-foot equals a fixed number of cubic meters:
- Set up the multiplication. Multiply your value in acre-feet by the factor:
- Cancel the units. The acre-foot units cancel, leaving the answer in m3.
- State the result. Complete the arithmetic: , so .
Acre-Feet to Cubic meters conversion table
| Acre-Feet (acre-foot) | Cubic meters (m3) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0 |
| 1 | 1233.482 |
| 2 | 2466.964 |
| 3 | 3700.446 |
| 4 | 4933.927 |
| 5 | 6167.409 |
| 6 | 7400.891 |
| 7 | 8634.373 |
| 8 | 9867.855 |
| 9 | 11101.34 |
| 10 | 12334.82 |
| 15 | 18502.23 |
| 20 | 24669.64 |
| 25 | 30837.05 |
| 30 | 37004.46 |
| 40 | 49339.27 |
| 50 | 61674.09 |
| 60 | 74008.91 |
| 70 | 86343.73 |
| 80 | 98678.55 |
| 90 | 111013.4 |
| 100 | 123348.2 |
| 150 | 185022.3 |
| 200 | 246696.4 |
| 250 | 308370.5 |
| 300 | 370044.6 |
| 400 | 493392.7 |
| 500 | 616740.9 |
| 600 | 740089.1 |
| 700 | 863437.3 |
| 800 | 986785.5 |
| 900 | 1110134 |
| 1000 | 1233482 |
| 2000 | 2466964 |
| 3000 | 3700446 |
| 4000 | 4933927 |
| 5000 | 6167409 |
| 10000 | 12334820 |
| 25000 | 30837050 |
| 50000 | 61674090 |
| 100000 | 123348200 |
| 250000 | 308370500 |
| 500000 | 616740900 |
| 1000000 | 1233482000 |
What is the Acre-Foot?
The acre-foot is a unit of volume equal to the amount of water needed to cover one acre of land to a depth of one foot. It is the standard measure used for large-scale water resources in the United States, including reservoirs, irrigation supplies, and municipal water rights.
Definition
One acre-foot is defined as the volume of a prism with a base area of one acre (43,560 square feet) and a height of one foot, giving exactly 43,560 cubic feet.
Because the US survey foot and the international foot differ slightly, the acre-foot is fixed by its exact defining relation of 43,560 cubic feet, which equals about 1,233.48 cubic metres or 1,233,482 litres.
Origin and History
The acre-foot arose in the American West during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as irrigation districts and water agencies needed a practical unit for measuring large volumes of stored and delivered water. It combines the acre, an old English unit of land area, with the foot of depth, making it intuitive for engineers estimating how much water a given area of reservoir or flooded field holds.
Law and Notable Facts
The acre-foot remains the legal and administrative unit for water rights, reservoir capacity, and interstate water compacts throughout the western United States. A commonly cited rule of thumb is that one acre-foot supplies roughly one to two typical American households for a year, which is why it is used to describe how many homes a reservoir can serve.
Real-World Examples and Conversions
- A single acre-foot equals about 325,851 US gallons of water.
- Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the US, has a capacity of roughly 28.9 million acre-feet when full.
- An Olympic swimming pool holds about 2,500 cubic metres, or roughly 2 acre-feet.
- In metric terms, 1 acre-foot is approximately 1,233 cubic metres (1.23348 million litres).
What is Cubic meters?
Let's explore the cubic meter, a fundamental unit for measuring volume. We'll look at its definition, how it's derived, and some real-world examples.
Definition of Cubic Meter
The cubic meter (symbol: ) is the SI derived unit of volume. It represents the volume of a cube with sides one meter in length. In simpler terms, imagine a box that's 1 meter wide, 1 meter long, and 1 meter high; the space inside that box is one cubic meter.
Formation of a Cubic Meter
A cubic meter is derived from the base SI unit for length, the meter (m). Since volume is a three-dimensional quantity, we multiply length by itself three times:
This means that a cubic meter represents the space occupied by a cube with sides of one meter each.
Volume Calculation with Cubic Meters
When calculating the volume of objects using cubic meters, various shapes may require different formulas to get accurate measures. Here are a few examples:
- Cube: Volume = . So, if the side is 2 meters, the volume is .
- Cuboid: Volume = . If the dimensions are 3 m, 2 m, and 1.5 m, then the volume is .
- Cylinder: Volume = . Assuming radius is 1 m and height is 2 m, the volume is approximately .
- Sphere: Volume = . If the radius is 1 m, the volume is approximately .
Real-World Examples of Cubic Meter Volumes
- Water Tanks: A small household water tank might hold around 1 cubic meter of water.
- Shipping Containers: Standard 20-foot shipping containers have an internal volume of approximately 33 cubic meters.
- Concrete: When ordering concrete for a construction project, it is often specified in cubic meters. A small residential foundation might require 5-10 cubic meters of concrete.
- Firewood: Firewood is often sold by the cubic meter or fractions thereof. A cubic meter of firewood is a substantial amount, enough to last for several weeks of heating in a stove.
- Excavation: When digging a swimming pool, the amount of earth removed is measured in cubic meters.
- Aquariums: A large home aquarium can hold around 1 cubic meter.
Interesting Facts
While no specific law is directly tied to the cubic meter itself, its importance lies in its use in various scientific and engineering calculations, where accurate volume measurements are crucial. Archimedes' principle, relating buoyancy to the volume of displaced fluid, is a classic example where volume, measured in cubic meters or related units, plays a central role. You can find out more about Archimedes' principle on websites such as Britannica.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the formula to convert Acre-Feet to Cubic meters?
Multiply the number of acre-feet by the conversion factor. As an equation, , since one acre-foot equals cubic meters.
How many Cubic meters are in 1 Acre-Foot?
There are cubic meters in one acre-foot. This fixed factor is used for every acre-feet-to-cubic meters calculation.
How do I convert Cubic meters back to Acre-Feet?
Reverse the conversion by dividing by , or equivalently multiply by the inverse factor: . For example, converts back to .
Why convert acre-feet to cubic meters?
Acre-feet is the standard unit for large water volumes in the US (reservoirs, irrigation, water rights), so converting to cubic meters helps when reporting or comparing those volumes in other units.
Is the Acre-Feet-to-Cubic meters factor exact or rounded?
The factor is shown to the precision our converter uses, which is more than accurate enough for everyday work. Only extremely large quantities or high-precision scientific use would notice any rounding in the final digits.