The se'ah or seah, plural se'im is a unit of dry measure of ancient origin found in the Bible and in Halakha, which equals one third of an ephah, or bath. In layman's terms, it is equal to the capacity of 144 medium-sized eggs, or what is equal in volume to about 9 US quarts. Its size in modern units varies widely according to the criteria used for defining it.
Biblical Seah
The seah is found in where Abraham orders Sarah to prepare three se'im of flour into loaves: According to Herbert G. May, chief editor of two Bible-related reference books, the bath may be archaeologically determined to have been about from a study of jar remains marked 'bath' and 'royal bath' from Tell Beit Mirsim. Using the standard of a bathunit, which has been established to be about 22 liters, 1 se'ah would equal about 7.3 litres or 7.3dm3. The Jewish Study Bible estimates the biblical seah at.
In the context of a mikveh, forty se'ahs are the minimum quantity of water needed to render bodily purification after an immersion. A mikveh must, according to the classical regulations, contain enough water to cover the entire body of an average-sized person. Based on a mikveh with the dimensions of 3 cubits deep, 1 cubit wide, and 1 cubit long, these were the minimal measurements needed to reach a volume of water that was estimated at being forty se'ahs of water. The exact volume referred to by a se'ah is debated, and classical rabbinical literature specifies only that it is enough to fit 144 eggs. In some Orthodox Jewish circles there is a proclivity to follow the stringent ruling of Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz, or Eliyahu of Vilna, whose view is that the size of eggs has progressively become smaller over the ages, therefore requiring a larger measure. According to this view, one seah is 14.3 litres, and therefore an ablution of forty se'ahs must contain at the least 575 litres, by their standard. Those dissenting and who hold the view that eggs today are the same size as the eggs used in measurement by the Sages are Rabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein, author of the Aruch HaShulchan, and Rabbi Shelomo Qorah, the late Chief Rabbi of Bnei Brak, among others, who having tested the trigonometric calculations for the volume of flour needed to separate the dough-portion, and which, according to Maimonides, can be measured by filling-up a space 10 fingerbreadths x 10 fingerbreadths square, with a depth of 3 fingerbreadths and 1/10 of another fingerbreadth, along with a little more than 1/100 of another fingerbreadth, found that medium-sized eggs of our modern age have not diminished in size.