The answer depends on the material. Different fuels have different amounts of heat energy.
The answer depends on the material. The number of therms in liquid nitrogen is pretty close to 0.
One MCF (thousand cubic feet) of natural gas is equivalent to approximately 10 therms.
The "therm" is a unit of energy often used in connection with various methodsof home heating ... gas, oil, electric, etc.1 therm = 100,000 BTU = 1.055 x 108 joulesThat's the easy part. The next question is: How much energy do you getby burning a cubic meter of natural gas ? The references we found on linelisted the following answers (in mega-joules):37, 40, 37, 19 to 56, 37 to 41, 39, 38.Instead of agonizing over which one is correct, let's say there's a grain of truthin all of them, and take an average ... 38.21 megajoules per cubic meter. OK.Now we're ready to do the conversion for you:(1 therm/1.055 x 108 joule) x ( 38.21 x 106 Joule/cubic meter) =0.362 therm/cubic meter2.761 cubic meter/therm.Your answer is:Multiply therms by 2.761 to find out how many cubic meters of gasyou need to burn in order to produce that much heat.
1 cubic meter is 1.308 cubic yards.
1 meter = 10 decimeter 1 cubic meter = 1000 cubic decimeter
There are approximately 1.30795 cubic yards in a cubic meter.
No cubic decimeters are in a meter. There are 1000 cubic decimeters in 1 cubic meter.
0.001 cubic meter
1 cubic meter ≈ 35.3146667 cubic foot
1 cubic meter is 1,000 cubic decimeters.
Each cubic meter is about 35.3147 cubic feet.
1 (cubic meter) = 35.315 cubic feet.