The question, as stated, cannot be answered sensibly. A square metre is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A cubic metre is a measure of volume, with dimensions [L3]. The two measure different things and elementary dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
In this case, the additional information required is the [average] depth of the pool..
10,000 US gallons of water is equal to: 37.85 cubic meters. (US gallons x 0.003785 = cubic meters)
cubic meters
A common guideline for the size of a balancing tank for a swimming pool is approximately 25-30% of the pool's volume. For a 600 cubic meters pool, the balancing tank should ideally be between 150-180 cubic meters in size to effectively manage water overflow and flow rates. The specific design considerations and requirements should be confirmed with a professional pool designer or engineer.
A large swimming pool or a small lake could contain roughly 28,000 cubic meters of water.
You can measure a swimming pool b cubic meters or gallons.
The correct answer to your question is "None, because I do not have such a pool." 24 ft * 24 ft * 5 ft = 2880 cubic ft = 81.55 cubic metres, approx.
"Cubic meter" is not a width. It's a volume, an amount of space, or the holding capacity of a box, a bottle, or a tank. When the water in an official Olympic-size swimming pool is 1.36 meters deep, there is 1,700 cubic meters of water in the pool.
Assuming the pool is 4 feet deep, a 15ft round pool would have a volume of approximately 17.6 cubic meters of water. This calculation is based on the formula for the volume of a cylinder (V=πr^2h) using the radius of the pool (7.5ft) and its depth (4ft).
Figure out how many cubic meters it holds. A cubic meter is 1000 liters, so go from there.
To find the volume of water needed to refill the pool, you multiply the dimensions of the pool together: 6m x 5m x 3m = 90 cubic meters. You would need to purchase 90 cubic meters of water to refill the pool.
Any unit of volume, such as liters or cubic meters.
A 28 meter square is 28 times 28 meters or 784 square meters. If it is one tenth of a meter (10 cm) deep, it has a volume of 78.4 cubic metersIf you mean 28 square meters (like a pool 4 meters by 7 meters) then the volume one tenth of a meter deep is 2.8 cubic meters.