Imperial Gallons per Hour (imp-gal/h) to Cubic kilometers per second (km3/s) conversion

1 imp-gal/h = 1.262803e-15 km3/skm3/simp-gal/h
Formula
1 imp-gal/h = 1.262803e-15 km3/s

Understanding Imperial Gallons per Hour to Cubic kilometers per second Conversion

The Imperial Gallon per Hour (imp-gal/h) is a modest UK flow rate of 4.54609 litres per hour. The Cubic kilometer per second (km3/s) is an enormous metric flow rate — one cubic kilometre is a billion cubic metres (10¹² litres) moving every second, a scale used for oceanography or global water-cycle modelling. Converting between them produces an extremely tiny number, which is exactly why this pairing appears mainly as a units-scale demonstration rather than a practical measurement.

Conversion Formula

1 imp-gal/h=1.26280×1015 km3/s1\ \text{imp-gal/h} = 1.26280 \times 10⁻¹⁵\ \text{km3/s}

To convert Imperial Gallons per Hour to Cubic kilometers per second, multiply the number of Imperial Gallons per Hour by this factor:

km3/s=imp-gal/h×1.26280×1015\text{km3/s} = \text{imp-gal/h} \times 1.26280 \times 10⁻¹⁵

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 Imperial Gallons per Hour to Cubic kilometers per second.

Write the formula:

km3/s=imp-gal/h×1.26280×1015\text{km3/s} = \text{imp-gal/h} \times 1.26280 \times 10⁻¹⁵

Substitute the value:

km3/s=25×1.26280×1015\text{km3/s} = 25 \times 1.26280 \times 10⁻¹⁵

Calculate the result:

25 imp-gal/h3.15701×1014 km3/s25\ \text{imp-gal/h} \approx 3.15701 \times 10⁻¹⁴\ \text{km3/s}

How to Convert Imperial Gallons per Hour to Cubic kilometers per second

Scale a small UK hourly flow down to the vast cubic-kilometre-per-second unit in three steps.

  1. Start with imp-gal/h: Confirm the value is imperial gallons per hour, each 4.54609 litres.
  2. Multiply by the factor: Multiply by 1.26280 × 10⁻¹⁵ to reach cubic kilometres per second.
  3. Keep scientific notation: For 25 imp-gal/h, the result is 25 × 1.26280 × 10⁻¹⁵ ≈ 3.15701 × 10⁻¹⁴ km3/s.

Imperial Gallons per Hour to Cubic kilometers per second conversion table

Imperial Gallons per Hour (imp-gal/h)Cubic kilometers per second (km3/s)
00
11.262803e-15
22.525606e-15
33.788408e-15
45.051211e-15
56.314014e-15
67.576817e-15
78.839619e-15
81.010242e-14
91.136523e-14
101.262803e-14
151.894204e-14
202.525606e-14
253.157007e-14
303.788408e-14
405.051211e-14
506.314014e-14
607.576817e-14
708.839619e-14
801.010242e-13
901.136523e-13
1001.262803e-13
1501.894204e-13
2002.525606e-13
2503.157007e-13
3003.788408e-13
4005.051211e-13
5006.314014e-13
6007.576817e-13
7008.839619e-13
8001.010242e-12
9001.136523e-12
10001.262803e-12
20002.525606e-12
30003.788408e-12
40005.051211e-12
50006.314014e-12
100001.262803e-11
250003.157007e-11
500006.314014e-11
1000001.262803e-10
2500003.157007e-10
5000006.314014e-10
10000001.262803e-9

What is the Imperial Gallon per Hour?

The imperial gallon per hour (imp-gal/h) is a unit of volumetric flow rate expressing how many imperial gallons of fluid pass a point in one hour. It is used in the UK and other Commonwealth countries for pumps, fuel consumption, and plumbing flow ratings.

Definition

One imperial gallon per hour equals one imperial gallon of volume divided by one hour (3,600 seconds):

1 imp-gal/h=0.00126280 l/s1\ \text{imp-gal/h} = 0.00126280\ \text{l/s}

The imperial gallon is defined as exactly 4.54609 litres, so dividing by 3,600 seconds gives 4.54609 / 3600 = 0.00126280 L/s (equivalently 4.54609 L/h).

Origin and History

The imperial gallon was established by the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824, originally defined as the volume of 10 pounds of water at a specified temperature. It was later fixed by reference to the litre. The "per hour" rate arose naturally in the 19th and 20th centuries as a practical measure for pump throughput and fuel usage, hours being a convenient interval for slow, steady flows.

Law and Notable Facts

The imperial gallon (4.54609 L exactly) is legally distinct from and about 20% larger than the US liquid gallon of 3.785411784 L. As a result an imperial gallon per hour is likewise about 20% greater than a US gallon per hour. Since UK metrication, the imperial gallon is no longer a primary trade unit but persists in fuel-economy figures (miles per gallon) and equipment specifications.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • A small garden or aquarium pump rated at 100 imp-gal/h moves about 454.6 litres of water every hour, roughly 0.126 L/s.
  • A domestic tap running at 1 imperial gallon per hour is a bare trickle of about 4.55 L each hour.
  • 1 imp-gal/h ≈ 0.833 US gal/h, reflecting the larger imperial gallon.
  • A pump moving 220 imp-gal/h delivers about 1,000 L/h, or roughly 0.278 L/s.

What is Cubic Kilometers per Second?

Cubic kilometers per second (km3/skm^3/s) is a unit of flow rate, representing the volume of a substance that passes through a given area each second. It's an extremely large unit, suitable for measuring immense flows like those found in astrophysics or large-scale geological events.

How is it Formed?

The unit is derived from the standard units of volume and time:

  • Cubic kilometer (km3km^3): A unit of volume equal to a cube with sides of 1 kilometer (1000 meters) each.
  • Second (s): The base unit of time in the International System of Units (SI).

Combining these, 1km3/s1 \, km^3/s means that one cubic kilometer of substance flows past a point every second. This is a massive flow rate.

Understanding Flow Rate

The general formula for flow rate (Q) is:

Q=VtQ = \frac{V}{t}

Where:

  • QQ is the flow rate (in this case, km3/skm^3/s).
  • VV is the volume (in km3km^3).
  • tt is the time (in seconds).

Real-World Examples (Relatively Speaking)

Because km3/skm^3/s is such a large unit, direct, everyday examples are hard to come by. However, we can illustrate some uses and related concepts:

  • Astrophysics: In astrophysics, this unit might be relevant in describing the rate at which matter accretes onto a supermassive black hole. While individual stars and gas clouds are smaller, the overall accretion disk and the mass being consumed over time can result in extremely high volume flow rates if considered on a cosmic scale.

  • Glacial Calving: Large-scale glacial calving events, where massive chunks of ice break off glaciers, could be approximated using cubic kilometers and seconds (though these events are usually measured over minutes or hours). The rate at which ice volume is discharged into the ocean is crucial for understanding sea-level rise. Although, it is much more common to use cubic meters per second (m3/sm^3/s) when working with glacial calving events.

  • Geological Events: During catastrophic geological events, such as the draining of massive ice-dammed lakes, the flow rates can approach cubic kilometers per second. Although such events are very short lived.

Notable Associations

While no specific law or person is directly associated with the unit "cubic kilometers per second," understanding flow rates in general is fundamental to many scientific fields:

  • Fluid dynamics: This is the broader study of how fluids (liquids and gases) behave when in motion. The principles are used in engineering (designing pipelines, aircraft, etc.) and in environmental science (modeling river flows, ocean currents, etc.).

  • Hydrology: The study of the movement, distribution, and quality of water on Earth. Flow rate is a key parameter in understanding river discharge, groundwater flow, and other hydrological processes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the formula to convert Imperial Gallons per Hour to Cubic kilometers per second?

Multiply the imp-gal/h value by 1.26280 × 10⁻¹⁵. That is, km3/s = imp-gal/h × 0.00000000000000126280.

How many Cubic kilometers per second are in 1 Imperial Gallon per Hour?

One Imperial Gallon per Hour equals 1.26280 × 10⁻¹⁵ km3/s. Reversed, 1 km3/s equals about 7.91889 × 10¹⁴ imp-gal/h.

How do I convert 1000 Imperial Gallons per Hour to Cubic kilometers per second?

Multiply 1000 by 1.26280 × 10⁻¹⁵ to get 1.26280 × 10⁻¹² km3/s.

Why is the result so small?

A cubic kilometre is 10¹² litres while an imperial gallon is only 4.54609 litres, so one gallon per hour is a vanishingly small fraction of a cubic kilometre per second.

When would anyone use cubic kilometers per second?

This huge unit appears in hydrology, oceanography and climate modelling, where flows like ocean currents or global runoff dwarf everyday gallon-scale rates.

Complete Imperial Gallons per Hour conversion table

imp-gal/h
UnitResult
Cubic Millimeters per second (mm3/s)1262.803 mm3/s
Cubic Centimeters per second (cm3/s)1.262803 cm3/s
Cubic Decimeters per second (dm3/s)0.001262803 dm3/s
Cubic Decimeters per minute (dm3/min)0.07576817 dm3/min
Cubic Decimeters per hour (dm3/h)4.54609 dm3/h
Cubic Decimeters per day (dm3/d)109.1062 dm3/d
Cubic Decimeters per year (dm3/a)39851.02 dm3/a
Millilitres per second (ml/s)1.262803 ml/s
Centilitres per second (cl/s)0.1262803 cl/s
Decilitres per second (dl/s)0.01262803 dl/s
Litres per second (l/s)0.001262803 l/s
Litres per minute (l/min)0.07576817 l/min
Litres per hour (l/h)4.54609 l/h
Litres per day (l/d)109.1062 l/d
Litres per year (l/a)39851.02 l/a
Kilolitres per second (kl/s)0.000001262803 kl/s
Kilolitres per minute (kl/min)0.00007576817 kl/min
Kilolitres per hour (kl/h)0.00454609 kl/h
Cubic meters per second (m3/s)0.000001262803 m3/s
Cubic meters per minute (m3/min)0.00007576817 m3/min
Cubic meters per hour (m3/h)0.00454609 m3/h
Cubic meters per day (m3/d)0.1091062 m3/d
Cubic meters per year (m3/a)39.85102 m3/a
Cubic kilometers per second (km3/s)1.262803e-15 km3/s
Imperial Gallons per Second (imp-gal/s)0.0002777778 imp-gal/s
Imperial Gallons per Minute (imp-gal/min)0.01666667 imp-gal/min
Imperial Gallons per Day (imp-gal/d)24 imp-gal/d
Teaspoons per second (tsp/s)0.2562027 tsp/s
Tablespoons per second (Tbs/s)0.08540088 Tbs/s
Cubic inches per second (in3/s)0.07706095 in3/s
Cubic inches per minute (in3/min)4.623657 in3/min
Cubic inches per hour (in3/h)277.4194 in3/h
Fluid Ounces per second (fl-oz/s)0.04270044 fl-oz/s
Fluid Ounces per minute (fl-oz/min)2.562027 fl-oz/min
Fluid Ounces per hour (fl-oz/h)153.7216 fl-oz/h
Cups per second (cup/s)0.005337555 cup/s
Pints per second (pnt/s)0.002668778 pnt/s
Pints per minute (pnt/min)0.1601267 pnt/min
Pints per hour (pnt/h)9.607599 pnt/h
Quarts per second (qt/s)0.001334389 qt/s
Gallons per second (gal/s)0.0003335972 gal/s
Gallons per minute (gal/min)0.02001583 gal/min
Gallons per hour (gal/h)1.20095 gal/h
Cubic feet per second (ft3/s)0.00004459546 ft3/s
Cubic feet per minute (ft3/min)0.002675728 ft3/min
Cubic feet per hour (ft3/h)0.1605437 ft3/h
Cubic yards per second (yd3/s)0.000001651684 yd3/s
Cubic yards per minute (yd3/min)0.00009910102 yd3/min
Cubic yards per hour (yd3/h)0.005946061 yd3/h

Volume flow rate conversions