Convert Bit to Petabyte (bPB)

The bit is the smallest unit of digital information, used in network speeds and information-theory calculations.

1.25 × 10^-16
1 b1.25 × 10^-16 PBNIST · BIPM accuracy

Bit to Petabyte Conversion Table

10 common values
BitPetabyte
1 b1.25 × 10^-16 PB
10 b1.25 × 10^-15 PB
100 b1.25 × 10^-14 PB
500 b6.25 × 10^-14 PB
1,000 b1.25 × 10^-13 PB
5,000 b6.25 × 10^-13 PB
10,000 b1.25 × 10^-12 PB
50,000 b6.25 × 10^-12 PB
100,000 b1.25 × 10^-11 PB
500,000 b6.25 × 10^-11 PB

How to Convert Bit to Petabyte Manually

Step by Step

Converting bits to petabytes is straightforward: multiply by the conversion factor. Follow these three steps to do it by hand or in your head.

  1. 1
    Take your value in bits
    Start with the number of bits (b) you want to convert.
  2. 2
    Multiply by 1.25 × 10^-16
    The conversion factor from b to PB is 1.25 × 10^-16. Multiply your value by this number.
  3. 3
    Read the result in petabytes
    The result is your value in petabytes (PB).
Practical Examples
1 b
equals
1.25 × 10^-16 PB
5 b
equals
6.25 × 10^-16 PB
10 b
equals
1.25 × 10^-15 PB
25 b
equals
3.125 × 10^-15 PB
100 b
equals
1.25 × 10^-14 PB

Formula

Multiply the value in bits by 1.25 × 10^-16. For the reverse direction, multiply by 8,000,000,000,000,000.

ForwardPB = b × 1.25 × 10^-16
Reverseb = PB × 8,000,000,000,000,000
Example: 10 b × 1.25 × 10^-16 = 1.25 × 10^-15 PB

Tips

Use these in everyday conversions
  • 8 bits = 1 byte.
  • Mbps ≠ MB/s — divide by 8 to get bytes per second.
  • Encryption strength often given in bits (128, 256).

Common Mistakes

Avoid these
  • Mixing b (bit) and B (byte) — 8× difference.
  • Thinking a 1 Gbps link delivers 1 GB/s — it's 125 MB/s.
  • Reading "256-bit encryption" as "256-byte" — totally different strength.

About Bit and Petabyte

What is the Bit?

The bit is the smallest unit of digital information, representing a single binary choice between two states (typically 0 or 1, true or false, on or off). Coined by mathematician John Tukey in 1947 (from 'binary digit'), and formalized by Claude Shannon in his 1948 information theory papers, the bit is the foundation of all modern computing, telecommunications, and information storage. Bit-rates measure data transmission speeds (megabits per second, Mbps, for internet connections), and information-theory entropy is calculated in bits. A single yes/no question carries 1 bit of information; an 8-bit byte represents 256 possible values. The bit relates to the byte (8 bits = 1 byte), the kilobit (1,000 bits = 1 kbit, used in telecom), and the kibibit (1,024 bits = 1 Kibit, used in computing). Modern fiber-optic networks transmit terabits per second.

  • Network throughput (bps, Mbps, Gbps)
  • Cryptography key lengths (e.g., 256-bit AES)
  • Compression algorithms and file header specs
Real-world examples

Home fibre: 100 Mbps = 100,000,000 bps. AES key: 256 bits. MP3 bit rate: 128–320 kbps.

What is the Petabyte?

The petabyte (PB) equals 1,000 terabytes (10¹⁵ bytes decimal) and rates large data centers, scientific research archives, and major social-media storage systems worldwide. The Large Hadron Collider generates about 30 petabytes of data per year, the U.S. Library of Congress digital collection is in the petabytes range, and major cloud-storage providers manage exabytes (1,000 PB) of data across their fleets. A petabyte could store roughly 250 million MP3 songs or about 13.3 years of HD video. The petabyte relates to the terabyte (1,000 TB = 1 PB), the exabyte (1,000 PB = 1 EB), and the gigabyte (10⁶ GB = 1 PB). Modern hyperscale data centers (Google, Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, Meta) store hundreds of petabytes per facility. The next consumer milestone — the petabyte hard drive — is expected within the next decade.

  • Cloud-provider storage capacity
  • Scientific datasets (CERN, genomics)
  • Media archives and streaming libraries
Real-world examples

Netflix total catalog: many PB. CERN LHC data: 100+ PB/year. YouTube uploads: EB scale now.

Learn About Both Units

💾 Reference

What is the Bit?

Read the unit page →
💾 Reference

What is the Petabyte?

Read the unit page →

Bit to Petabyte FAQ

5 questions
How many petabytes in a bit?
One bit equals 1.25 × 10^-16 petabytes.
How do I convert bits to petabytes?
Multiply the bit value by 1.25 × 10^-16 to get the equivalent in petabytes.
What is 100 bits in petabytes?
100 bits equals 1.25 × 10^-14 petabytes.
Is a bit bigger than a petabyte?
No. 1 bit equals 1.25 × 10^-16 petabytes, so one bit is smaller.
How to convert bits to petabytes without a calculator?
Multiply by 0 for a quick estimate; use a calculator for precise results.

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