How many exafoot of air [15 °C] in 1 dekabar? The answer is 2.7305296782499E-13. We assume you are converting between exafoot of air [15 °C] and dekabar. You can view more details on each measurement unit: exafoot of air [15 °C] or dekabar The SI derived unit for pressure is the pascal. 1 pascal is equal to 2.7305296782499E-19 exafoot of air [15 °C], or 1.0E-6 dekabar. Note that rounding errors may occur, so always check the results. Use this page to learn how to convert between exafeet of air and dekabars. Type in your own numbers in the form to convert the units!
1 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 3662293100000 dekabar
2 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 7324586200000 dekabar
3 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 10986879300000 dekabar
4 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 14649172400000 dekabar
5 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 18311465500000 dekabar
6 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 21973758600000 dekabar
7 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 25636051700000 dekabar
8 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 29298344800000 dekabar
9 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 32960637900000 dekabar
10 exafoot of air [15 °C] to dekabar = 36622931000000 dekabar
You can do the reverse unit conversion from dekabar to exafoot of air [15 °C], or enter any two units below:
The SI prefix "deka" represents a factor of 101, or in exponential notation, 1E1.
So 1 dekabar = 101 bars.
The definition of a bar is as follows:
The bar is a measurement unit of pressure, equal to 1,000,000 dynes per square centimetre (baryes), or 100,000 newtons per square metre (pascals). The word bar is of Greek origin, báros meaning weight. Its official symbol is "bar"; the earlier "b" is now deprecated, but still often seen especially as "mb" rather than the proper "mbar" for millibars.
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