Orders of magnitude (mass)

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(Redirected from 1 E-8 kg)
Orders of magnitude
area
currency
data
density
energy
frequency
length
mass
numbers
power
pressure
specific heat capacity
speed
temperature
time
volume
Conversion of units
physical unit
SI
SI base unit
SI derived unit
SI prefix
Planck units
Decade of mass Mass of item Item
10−36 kg 3.6 × 10−36 kg Electron neutrino, upper limit on mass (2 eV/c²)
10−35 kg    
10−34 kg    
10−33 kg    
10−32 kg    
10−31 kg 9.1 × 10−31 kg Electron (511 keV/c²), the lightest elementary particle with a measured nonzero mass.
10−30 kg    
10−29 kg    
10−28 kg 1.9 × 10−28 kg Muon (106 MeV/c²)
10−27 kg
yoctogram (yg)
1.661 × 10−27 kg Atomic mass unit (amu) or dalton (Da)
1.673 × 10−27 kg Proton (938.3 MeV/c²)
1.674 × 10−27 kg Hydrogen atom, the lightest atom
1.675 × 10−27 kg Neutron (939.6 MeV/c²)
10−26 kg 1.15 × 10−26 kg Lithium atom (6.941 amu)
2.99 × 10−26 kg Water molecule (18.015 amu)
7.95 × 10−26 kg Titanium atom (47.867 amu)
10−25 kg 1.79 × 10−25 kg Silver atom (107.8682 amu)
1.6 × 10−25 kg Z boson (91.2 GeV/c²)
3.1 × 10−25 kg Top quark (173 GeV/c²), the heaviest known elementary particle
3.2 × 10−25 kg Caffeine molecule (194 amu)
3.45 × 10−25 kg Lead-208 atom, the heaviest stable atom
10−24 kg
zeptogram (zg)
   
10−23 kg    
10−22 kg 1.1 × 10−22 kg Hemoglobin A molecule
10−21 kg
attogram (ag)
   
10−20 kg 10 −20 kg A small virus
10−19 kg    
10−18 kg
femtogram (fg)
   
10−17 kg 1.1 × 10−17 kg Mass equivalent of one joule
4.6 × 10−17 kg Mass equivalent of a calorie; increase in mass by heating one gram of water by 1 °C
10−16 kg 7 × 10−16 kg Escherichia coli bacterium
10−15 kg
picogram (pg)
   
10−14 kg    
10−13 kg    
10−12 kg
nanogram (ng)
10−12 kg Average cell of the human body (1 nanogram)
10−11 kg 1.5 × 10−11 kg Lethal dose of botulin toxin (the deadliest substance known) - about 200 pg/kg of body mass, so a 15 ng dose would kill almost anybody.
10−10 kg    
10−9 kg
microgram (µg)
2 × 10−9 kg Uncertainty in the mass of the prototype kilogram (2 micrograms)
3 × 10−9 kg Small grain of sand (0.063 mm diameter, 3 micrograms)
10−8 kg 2.2 × 10−8 kg Planck mass
10−7 kg 10−7 kg "Hit" of LSD (100 micrograms)
2 × 10−7 kg Lethal dose of ricin (200 micrograms)
10−6 kg
milligram (mg)
1–2 × 10−6 kg Typical mass of a mosquito (1–2 milligrams)
10−5 kg 1–3 × 10−5 Dose of DXM per labeling on most products (10-30 milligrams)
9 × 10−5 Large grain of sand (2 mm diameter, 90 milligrams)
10−4 kg 1.5 × 10−4 kg Typical amount of caffeine in one cup of coffee (150 milligrams)
2 × 10−4 kg Metric carat (200 milligrams)
1–2 × 10−4 kg Maximum legal caffeine pill in United States (0.1–0.2 grams)
3 × 10−4 kg Hallucinogenic dose for mescaline (0.3 grams)
10−3 kg
gram (g)
10−3 kg One millilitre of water (1 gram)
8 × 10−3 kg Typical coins: euro (7.5 grams) and U.S. dollar (8.1 grams)
10−2 kg 1 × 10−2 kg Lethal dose of caffeine for an adult (10 grams)
1.2–4 × 10−2 kg Adult mouse (Mus musculus, 12–40 grams)
2.4 × 10−2 kg Amount of ethanol in one drink (24 grams)
2.8 × 10−2 kg Ounce (avoirdupois) (28.35 grams)
10−1 kg 0.15 kg Human kidney (150 grams)
0.454 kg Pound (avoirdupois) (454 grams)
1 kg
kilogram (kg)
1 kg One litre of water, approx.
3 kg Newborn human baby
4.0 kg Women's shotput
5–7 kg Housecat
5–9 kg Pizote
7.3 kg Men's shotput
101 kg 10–30 kg A CRT computer monitor or television set
15–20 kg Medium-sized dog
70 kg Adult human
102 kg 100 kg Quintal (mainly U.S. - other countries have different definitions)
180–250 kg Mature lion, female (180 kg) and male (250 kg)
700 kg Dairy cow
907 kg Short ton (U.S.)
103 kg
megagram (Mg)
1000 kg Metric ton; one cubic metre of water
1016 kg Ton (British) / 1 long ton (U.S.)
800–1600 kg Typical passenger automobiles
3000–7000 kg Adult elephant
104 kg 1.1 × 104 kg Hubble Space Telescope (11 tons)
1.2 × 104 kg Largest elephant on record (12 tons)
1.4 × 104 kg Bell of Big Ben (14 tons)
8–10 × 104 kg Largest known dinosaur, the Argentinosaurus (80–100 tons)
105 kg 105 kg Largest animal, the blue whale (100 tons)
1.87 × 105 kg International Space Station (187 tons)
6 × 105 kg Antonov An-225 (the world's heaviest aircraft) maximum take-off mass (600 tons)
106 kg
gigagram (Gg)
1.5 × 106 kg Individual gate of the Thames Barrier
2.041 × 106 kg Launch mass of the Space Shuttle (2041 tons)
107 kg 1.1 × 107 kg Annual production of Darjeeling tea (11,000 tons)
2.6 × 107 kg RMS Titanic (26,000 tons)
9.97 × 107 kg Heaviest train ever (99,700 tons): Australia's BHP Iron Ore, 2001 record
108 kg 6.5 × 108 kg Largest ship, Knock Nevis, when fully loaded (650,000 tons)
109 kg
teragram (Tg)
4.3 × 109 kg Amount of matter converted into energy by the Sun each second
6 × 109 kg Great Pyramid of Giza
1010 kg 6 × 1010 kg Amount of concrete in the Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest concrete structure
1011 kg 3 × 1011 kg Total human world population
2 × 1011 kg Amount of water stored in London storage reservoirs (0.2 km³)
1–8 × 1011 kg Total biomass of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba, thought to be the most plentiful creature on the planet
1012 kg
petagram (Pg)
3.91 × 1012 kg World oil production in 2001
1013 kg    
1014 kg 2–3 × 1014 kg Amount of rock that exploded in the Mount Tambora volcanic eruption in 1815
1015 kg
exagram (Eg)
1 × 1015 kg Estimated total world coal reserves economically accessible using current mining technology
1016 kg    
1017 kg    
1018 kg
zettagram (Zg)
5 × 1018 kg Earth's atmosphere
1019 kg    
1020 kg 8.7 × 1020 kg Ceres, the largest asteroid in the Asteroid Belt
1021 kg
yottagram (Yg)
1.35×1021 kg Earth's oceans
1.6×1021 kg Charon, the moon of Pluto
2.3×1021 kg Total mass of the Asteroid Belt
1022 kg 1.2 × 1022 kg Pluto
7.35 × 1022 kg Earth's Moon
1023 kg 1.2 × 1023 kg Titan, largest moon of Saturn
1.5 × 1023 kg Triton, largest moon of Neptune
1.5 × 1023 kg Ganymede, largest moon of Jupiter
3.2 × 1023 kg Mercury
6.4 × 1023 kg Mars
1024 kg 4.9 × 1024 kg Venus
6.0 × 1024 kg The Earth
1025 kg 8.7 × 1025 kg Uranus
1026 kg 1.0 × 1026 kg Neptune
5.7 × 1026 kg Saturn
1027 kg 1.9 × 1027 kg Jupiter
1028 kg 1–17 × 1028 kg Brown dwarf stars
1029 kg    
1030 kg 2 × 1030 kg Sun; one solar mass
2.9 × 1030 kg Chandrasekhar limit (1.44 solar masses)
1031 kg 4 × 1031 kg Betelgeuse, a red supergiant star
1032 kg    
1033 kg    
1034 kg    
1035 kg    
1036 kg 2 × 1036 kg Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the center of our Galaxy
1037 kg    
1038 kg   Typical mass of a globular cluster
1039 kg    
1040 kg    
1041 kg 3.6 × 1041 kg Visible mass of the Milky Way galaxy
1042 kg 2 × 1042 kg Total mass of the Milky Way galaxy
1043 kg    
1044 kg    
1045 kg    
1046 kg 2 × 1046 kg Virgo Supercluster
1047 kg    
1048 kg    
1049 kg    
1050 kg    
1051 kg    
1052 kg 2 × 1052 kg Mass of a critical density Universe
3 × 1052 kg Mass of the observable universe


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