Orders of magnitude (mass)


To help compare different orders of magnitude, the following lists describe various mass levels between 10−59 kg and 1052 kg.

Units of mass



The table below is based on the kilogram, the base unit of mass in the International System of Units. The kilogram is the only standard unit to include an SI prefix as part of its name. The gram is an SI derived unit of mass. However, the names of all SI mass units are based on gram, rather than on kilogram; thus 103 kg is a megagram, not a "kilokilogram".
The tonne is a SI-compatible unit of mass equal to a megagram, or 103 kg. The unit is in common use for masses above about 103 kg and is often used with SI prefixes. For example, a gigagram or 109 g is 103 tonne, commonly called a kilotonne.

Other units

Other units of mass are also in use. Historical units include the stone, the pound, the carat, and the grain.
For subatomic particles, physicists use the mass equivalent to the energy represented by an electronvolt. At the atomic level, chemists use the mass of one-twelfth of a carbon-12 atom. Astronomers use the mass of the sun.

Below 10−24 kg

Unlike other physical quantities, mass-energy does not have an a priori expected minimal quantity, as is the case with time or length, or an observed basic quantum as in the case of electric charge. Planck's law allows for the existence of photons with arbitrarily low energies. Consequently, there can only ever be an experimental lower bound on the mass of a supposedly massless particle; in the case of the photon, this confirmed lower bound is of the order of 3×10−27 eV = 10−62 kg.
Factor ValueItem
10−598.9 kgGraviton
10−404.2 kgMass equivalent of the energy of a photon at the peak of the spectrum of the cosmic microwave background radiation
10−361.8 kgOne eV/c2, the mass equivalent of one electronvolt
10−363.6 kgElectron neutrino, upper limit on mass
10−319.11 kgElectron, the lightest elementary particle with a measured nonzero rest mass
10−303.0–5.5 kgUp quark
10−281.9 kgMuon
10−27
yoctogram
1.661 kgAtomic mass unit or dalton
10−27
yoctogram
1.673 kgProton
10−27
yoctogram
1.674 kgHydrogen atom, the lightest atom
10−27
yoctogram
1.675 kgNeutron
10−261.2 kgLithium atom
10−263.0 kgWater molecule
10−268.0 kgTitanium atom
10−251.1 kgCopper atom
10−251.6 kgZ boson
10−252.2 kgHiggs Boson
10−253.1 kgTop quark, the heaviest known elementary particle
10−253.2 kgCaffeine molecule
10−253.5 kgLead-208 atom
10−254.9 kgOganesson-294 atom, the heaviest known nuclide

10−24 to 10−19 kg

Factor ValueItem
10−24
zeptogram
1.2 kgBuckyball molecule
10−231.4 kgUbiquitin, a small protein
10−235.5 kgA typical protein
10−221.1 kgHaemoglobin A molecule in blood
10−21
attogram
1.65 kgDouble-stranded DNA molecule consisting of 1,578 base pairs
10−21
attogram
4.3 kgProkaryotic ribosome
10−21
attogram
7.1 kgEukaryotic ribosome
10−21
attogram
7.6 kgBrome mosaic virus, a small virus
10−203 kgSynaptic vesicle in rats
10−206.8 kgTobacco mosaic virus
10−191.1 kgNuclear pore complex in yeast
10−192.5 kgHuman adenovirus

10−18 to 10−13 kg

Factor ValueItem
10−18
femtogram
1 kgHIV-1 virus
10−18
femtogram
4.7 kgDNA sequence of length 4.6 Mbp, the weight of the E. coli genome
10−17~1 kgVaccinia virus, a large virus
10−171.1 kgMass equivalent of 1 joule
10−163 kgProchlorococcus cyanobacteria, the smallest photosynthetic organism on Earth
10−15
picogram
1 kgE. coli bacterium
10−15
picogram
6 kgDNA in a typical diploid human cell
10−142.2 kgHuman sperm cell
10−146 kgYeast cell
10−131.5 kgDunaliella salina, a green algae

10−12 to 10−7 kg

Factor ValueItem
10−12
nanogram
1 kgAverage human cell
10−12
nanogram
2–3 kgHeLa human cell
10−12
nanogram
8 kgGrain of birch pollen
10−11
10−102.5 kgGrain of maize pollen
10−103.5 kgVery fine grain of sand
10−9
microgram
3.6 kgHuman ovum
10−9
microgram
2.4 kgUS RDA for vitamin B12 for adults
10−81.5 kgUS RDA for vitamin D for adults
10−8~2 kgUncertainty in the mass of the international prototype of the kilogram
10−82.2 kgPlanck mass
10−8~7 kgOne eyelash hair
10−71.5 kgUS RDA for iodine for adults
10−72–3 kgFruit fly

10 to 1 kg

Factor ValueItem
10−6
milligram
2.5 kgMosquitoes, common smaller species, grain of salt or sand, medicine
10−5
centigram
1.1 kgSmall granule of quartz
10−5
centigram
2 kgAdult housefly
10−4
decigram
0.27–2.0 kgRange of amounts of caffeine in one cup of coffee
10−4
decigram
1.5 kgA frame of 35mm motion picture film
10−4
decigram
2 kgMetric carat
10−3
gram
1 kgOne cubic centimeter of water
10−3
gram
1 kgUS dollar bill
10−3
gram
~1 kgTwo raisins
10−3
gram
~8 kgCoins of one Euro, one U.S. dollar and one Canadian Loonie
10−2
decagram
2–4 kgAdult mouse
10−2
decagram
1.37 kgAmount of ethanol defined as one standard drink in the U.S.
10−2
decagram
2.8 kgOunce
10−2
decagram
4.7 kgMass equivalent of the energy that is 1 megaton of TNT equivalent
10−1
hectogram
0.1-0.2 kgAn orange
10−1
hectogram
0.142-0.149 kgA baseball used in the major league.
10−1
hectogram
0.454 kgPound

1 kg to 105 kg

Factor ValueItem
1 kg
kilogram
1 kgOne litre of water
1 kg
kilogram
1–3 kgSmallest breed of dog
1 kg
kilogram
1–3 kgTypical laptop computer, 2010
1 kg
kilogram
1–3 kgAdult domestic tortoise
1 kg
kilogram
2.5–4 kgNewborn human baby
1 kg
kilogram
4.0 kgWomen's shot
1 kg
kilogram
4–5 kgHousecat
1 kg
kilogram
7.26 kgMen's shot
1019–27 kgMedium-sized dog
10110–30 kgA CRT computer monitor or television set
10150 kgLarge dog breed
10170 kgAdult human
102130–180 kgMature lion, female and male
102200–250 kgGiant tortoise
102240–450 kgGrand piano
102400–900 kgDairy cow
102500–500,000 kgA teaspoon of white dwarf material
102635 kgHeaviest human in history
102907.2 kg1 short ton
103
megagram
1000 kgMetric ton/tonne
103
megagram
1000 kg1 cubic metre of water
103
megagram
1016.05 kgTon / 1 long ton
103
megagram
1300–1600 kgTypical passenger cars
103
megagram
2700–6000 kgAdult elephant
1041.1 kgHubble Space Telescope
1041.2 kgLargest elephant on record
1041.4 kgBig Ben
1042.7 kgENIAC computer, 1946
1044 kgMaximum gross mass of a semi-trailer truck in the EU
1045–6 kgTank; Bulldozer
1046.0 kgLargest single-piece meteorite, Hoba West Meteorite
1047.3 kgLargest dinosaur, Argentinosaurus
1051.8 kgLargest animal ever, a blue whale
1054.2 kgInternational Space Station
1056 kgWorld's heaviest aircraft: Antonov An-225

106 to 1011 kg

Factor ValueItem
106
gigagram
1 kgTrunk of the giant sequoia tree named General Sherman, largest living tree by trunk volume
106
gigagram
2.0 kgLaunch mass of the Space Shuttle
106
gigagram
6 kgLargest clonal colony, the quaking aspen named Pando
106
gigagram
7.8 kgVirginia-class nuclear submarine
1071 kgAnnual production of Darjeeling tea
1075.2 kgRMS Titanic when fully loaded
1079.97 kgHeaviest train ever: Australia's BHP Iron Ore, 2001 record
1086.6 kgLargest ship and largest mobile man-made object, Seawise Giant, when fully loaded
1087 kgHeaviest building, Palace of the Parliament in Bucharest, Romania
109
teragram
4.3 kgAmount of matter converted into energy by the Sun each second
109
teragram
6 kgGreat Pyramid of Giza
1010
6 kgAmount of concrete in the Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest concrete structure
1011~1 kgThe mass of a primordial black hole with an evaporation time equal to the age of the universe
10112 kgAmount of water stored in London storage reservoirs
10114 kgTotal mass of the world's human population
10115 kgTotal biomass of Antarctic krill, probably the most plentiful animal species on the planet

1012 to 1017 kg

1018 to 1023 kg

Factor ValueItem
1018
zettagram
5.1 kgEarth's atmosphere
1018
zettagram
5.6 kgHyperion, a moon of Saturn
10193 kg3 Juno, one of the larger asteroids in the asteroid belt
10193 kgThe rings of Saturn
10209.4 kgCeres, dwarf planet within the asteroid belt
1021
yottagram
1.4 kgEarth's oceans
1021
yottagram
1.5 kgCharon, the largest moon of Pluto
1021
yottagram
2.9–3.7 kgThe asteroid belt
10221.3 kgPluto
10222.1 kgTriton, largest moon of Neptune
10227.3 kgEarth's Moon
10231.3 kgTitan, largest moon of Saturn
10231.5 kgGanymede, largest moon of Jupiter
10233.3 kgMercury
10236.4 kgMars

1024 to 1029 kg

Factor ValueItem
10244.9 kgVenus
10246.0 kgEarth
10253 kgOort cloud
10258.7 kgUranus
10261.0 kgNeptune
10265.7 kgSaturn
10271.9 kgJupiter
10282–14 kgBrown dwarfs
10293 kgBarnard's Star, a nearby red dwarf

1030 to 1035 kg

Factor ValueItem
10302 kgThe Sun
10302.8 kgChandrasekhar limit
10314 kgBetelgeuse, a red supergiant star
10324–7 kgR136a1, the most massive of known stars
10326–8 kgHyades star cluster
10331.6 kgPleiades star cluster
1034
1035~1035 kgTypical globular cluster in the Milky Way
10352 kgLow end of mass range for giant molecular clouds
10357.3 kgJeans mass of a giant molecular cloud at 100K and density 30 atoms per cc;
possible example: Orion Molecular Cloud Complex

1036 to 1041 kg

Factor ValueItem
10361.79 kgThe entire Carina complex.
10362.4 kgThe Gould Belt of stars, including the Sun
10367–8 kgThe supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, associated with the radio source Sagittarius A*
10368 kgOmega centauri, the largest globular cluster in the milky way, containing approximately 10 million stars.
1037
1038
1039
10404.17 kgNGC 4889, the largest measured supermassive black hole, weighing 21 billion solar masses
10414 kgVisible mass of the Milky Way galaxy

1042 kg and greater

Factor ValueItem
10421.2 kgMilky Way galaxy
10422–3 kgLocal Group of galaxies, including the Milky Way
1043
1044
10451–2 kgLocal or Virgo Supercluster of galaxies, including the Local Group
1046
10472 kgLaniakea supercluster of galaxies, which encompasses the Virgo supercluster
10482 kgPisces–Cetus Supercluster Complex, a galaxy filament that includes the Laniakea Supercluster.
10494 kgHercules–Corona Borealis Great Wall, the largest structure in the known universe
1050
1051
10524.4506 kgMass of the observable universe as estimated by NASA
10526 kgMass of the observable universe as estimated by the National Solar Observatory