1 metre
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Leonardo da Vinci drew the Vitruvian Man within a square of side 1.83 metres and a circle about 1.2 metres in radius
To help compare different orders of magnitude this page lists lengths between one metre and ten metres.
Contents |
[edit] Conversions
1 metre is:
- 10 decimetres
- 100 centimetres
- 1000 millimetres
- 39.37 inches
- 3.28 feet
- side of square with area 1 m2
- edge of cube with surface area 6 m2 and volume 1 m3
- radius of circle with area 3.14 m2
- radius of sphere with surface area 12.56 m2 and volume 4.19 m3
[edit] Human-defined scales and structures
- approximate height of the top part of a doorknob on a door
- 1.435 m — Standard gauge of railway track used by about 60% of railways in the world = 4' 8½"
- 2.77 - 3.44 m — wavelength of the broadcast radio FM band 87–108 MHz
- 3.05 m — The length of an old Mini
- 8.38 m — The length of a London Bus (Routemaster)
[edit] Sports
- 3.05 m — (10 feet) height of the basket in basketball
- 2.44 m — height of a football goal.[Citation needed]
- 2.45 m — highest jump by a human being (Javier Sotomayor)[1]
- 3.048 m (10 feet) — height of the basket in basketball[Citation needed]
- 8.95 m — longest jump by a human being (Mike Powell)[Citation needed]
[edit] Nature
- 1 m — height of Homo floresiensis (the "Hobbit")
- 1.15 m — a pizote (mammal)
- 1.37 m — average height of an Andamanese person
- 1.63 m — (5 feet 4 inches) (or 64 inches) - height of average US female human as of 2002[update] (source: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)).
- 1.77 m — (5 feet 9.5 inches) - height of average US male human as of 2002[update] (source: US CDC as per female above)
- 2.72 m — tallest known human being (Robert Wadlow)[Citation needed]
- 2.72 m — (8 feet 11 inches) - height of Robert Wadlow, the tallest human in recorded history
- 3.63 m — the record wingspan for living birds (a Wandering Albatross)
- 5.20 m — height of a giraffe[Citation needed]
- 5.5 m — height of a Baluchitherium, the largest land mammal ever lived
- 7 m — wingspan of Argentavis, the largest flying bird known
- 7.50 m — approximate length of the human gastrointestinal tract
[edit] Astronomical
- 3 - 6 m — approximate diameter of 2003 SQ222, a meteoroid
[edit] See also
Click on the thumbnail image to jump to the desired Human-scale order of length magnitude article: top-left is 1E-6m, lower-right is 1E5m.
| Orders of magnitude for length in E notation, shorter than one metre: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <-24 | -24 | -23 | -22 | -21 | -20 | -19 | -18 | -17 | -16 | -15 | -14 | -13 | -12 | -11 | -10 | -9 | -8 | -7 | -6 | -5 | -4 | -3 | -2 | -1 | 0 |
| longer than 1 metre: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |

