Bit to Exbibyte Converter
Convert bits to exbibytes with our free online data storage converter.
Quick Answer
1 Bit = 1.084202e-19 exbibytes
Formula: Bit × conversion factor = Exbibyte
Use the calculator below for instant, accurate conversions.
Our Accuracy Guarantee
All conversion formulas on UnitsConverter.io have been verified against NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) guidelines and international SI standards. Our calculations are accurate to 10 decimal places for standard conversions and use arbitrary precision arithmetic for astronomical units.
Bit to Exbibyte Calculator
How to Use the Bit to Exbibyte Calculator:
- Enter the value you want to convert in the 'From' field (Bit).
- The converted value in Exbibyte will appear automatically in the 'To' field.
- Use the dropdown menus to select different units within the Data Storage category.
- Click the swap button (⇌) to reverse the conversion direction.
How to Convert Bit to Exbibyte: Step-by-Step Guide
Converting Bit to Exbibyte involves multiplying the value by a specific conversion factor, as shown in the formula below.
Formula:
1 Bit = 1.0842e-19 exbibytesExample Calculation:
Convert 1024 bits: 1024 × 1.0842e-19 = 1.1102e-16 exbibytes
Disclaimer: For Reference Only
These conversion results are provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, we make no guarantees regarding the precision of these results, especially for conversions involving extremely large or small numbers which may be subject to the inherent limitations of standard computer floating-point arithmetic.
Not for professional use. Results should be verified before use in any critical application. View our Terms of Service for more information.
Need to convert to other data storage units?
View all Data Storage conversions →What is a Bit and a Exbibyte?
What is a Bit?
A bit (short for binary digit) is the basic unit of information in information theory, computing, and digital communications. It represents a logical state with one of two possible values.
Mathematical Definition: A bit is the amount of information required to distinguish between two equally probable alternatives. In information theory (Shannon entropy), the entropy $H$ of a random variable $X$ with two equally likely outcomes is 1 bit:
$$H(X) = - \sum p(x) \log_2 p(x) = - (0.5 \log_2 0.5 + 0.5 \log_2 0.5) = 1 \text{ bit}$$
If an event has a probability $p$, the information content $I$ (in bits) of observing that event is: $$I(p) = -\log_2(p)$$
- Coin Flip: Probability 0.5. Information = $-\log_2(0.5) = 1$ bit.
- Rolling a 4 on a die: Probability 1/6. Information = $-\log_2(1/6) \approx 2.58$ bits.
- Guessing a number 1-100: Probability 0.01. Information = $-\log_2(0.01) \approx 6.64$ bits.
Physical Representation: How Computers "Store" Bits
In the abstract world of math, a bit is just a number. But in the physical world of your computer, a bit must be a tangible physical state. Engineers have developed many ways to store this "0" or "1":
1. Voltage (CPUs and RAM)
- Mechanism: Transistors act as switches that either block or allow current.
- State 1 (High): Voltage is near the supply level (e.g., 3.3V or 5V).
- State 0 (Low): Voltage is near ground level (0V).
- Speed: Extremely fast (switching billions of times per second).
- Volatility: Requires constant power. If you unplug the computer, the electrons stop flowing, and the bits vanish (Volatile Memory).
2. Electric Charge (Flash Memory / SSDs)
- Mechanism: Floating-gate transistors trap electrons in an insulated "cage."
- State 0: Electrons are trapped in the floating gate (changing the threshold voltage).
- State 1: No electrons in the floating gate.
- Speed: Fast, but slower than RAM.
- Volatility: Non-volatile. The electrons stay trapped for years even without power, which is why your USB drive remembers your files.
3. Magnetism (Hard Disk Drives - HDDs)
- Mechanism: Tiny regions (domains) on a spinning platter are magnetized.
- State 1: Magnetic north pole points in one direction.
- State 0: Magnetic north pole points in the opposite direction.
- Read/Write: A head flies over the surface detecting or flipping the magnetic field.
- Volatility: Non-volatile. Magnets stay magnetized.
4. Light / Optics (CDs, DVDs, Blu-ray)
- Mechanism: Physical pits and lands (flat areas) are stamped into a plastic disc.
- State: A laser beam scans the track.
- Land: Reflects the laser back to the sensor.
- Pit: Scatters the light (no reflection).
- Volatility: Non-volatile and Read-Only (for pressed discs).
5. Quantum States (Quantum Computing)
- Mechanism: Spin of an electron or polarization of a photon.
- State: Can be Up (1), Down (0), or a superposition of both.
Bit vs. Byte: The Crucial Difference
The most common source of confusion in digital metrics is the difference between the bit and the byte.
- The Bit (b) is the atom of data. It is small, fast, and granular.
- Used for: Transmission speeds (Internet, USB, Wi-Fi).
- Why: Serial transmission sends data one bit at a time down a wire.
- The Byte (B) is a molecule of data (8 bits). It is the smallest addressable unit of memory.
- Used for: Storage capacity (RAM, SSDs, File sizes).
- Why: Computers process data in chunks (bytes/words), not individual bits.
The Rule of 8: To convert Bytes to bits, multiply by 8. To convert bits to Bytes, divide by 8.
- 100 Mbps Internet (Megabits) = 12.5 MB/s download speed (Megabytes).
An exbibyte (EiB) is a unit of digital information storage equal to 2⁶⁰ bytes (one exbibyte = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes). It uses the standard IEC binary prefix 'exbi-'. One exbibyte is equivalent to 1,024 pebibytes or 8,796,093,022,208 bits.
Precise definitions:
- 1 exbibyte (EiB) = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes (exactly 2⁶⁰)
- 1 EiB = 1,024 pebibytes (PiB)
- 1 EiB = 0.867361737988403547205962240695953369140625 exabytes (EB)
- 1 EiB = 9,403,959,233,815,552,896 bits (8.796 exabits)
Relationship to decimal units:
- 1 exbibyte (EiB) ≈ 0.867 exabytes (EB)
- 1 exabyte (EB) = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes = 0.867 EiB (15% larger)
- 1 EiB = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes = 1.153 EB (15% larger than EB)
Exbibyte (EiB) vs. Exabyte (EB): Massive Scale Precision
At exbibyte scale, the 15% difference becomes astronomically significant:
Exbibyte (EiB) — Binary prefix:
- Exactly 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes (2⁶⁰)
- Based on binary powers (powers of 2)
- Used by scientific computing, technical specifications, binary systems
- Standard for precision at extreme scales
Exabyte (EB) — Decimal prefix:
- Exactly 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes (10¹⁸)
- Based on SI decimal (powers of 10)
- Used by cloud providers, global statistics, consumer marketing
- Standard for general data measurements
Why the 15.3% difference is critical:
- Scientific computing: 100 EiB = 86.7 EB of equivalent capacity
- Data center planning: Precision matters for resource allocation
- Future projections: Accurate scaling for next-generation systems
Percentage difference: EiB is 15.3% larger than EB, so the gap grows exponentially:
- 1 EiB = 0.867 EB (13.3% less in decimal terms)
- 10 EiB = 8.67 EB (13.3% less)
- 100 EiB = 86.7 EB (13.3% less)
Exbibyte (EiB) vs. Exabit (Eb): Extreme Scale Data Distinction
Another critical distinction at the highest scales:
Exbibyte (EiB):
- Measures storage capacity (data at rest)
- 1 EiB = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes
- Used for: massive storage systems, scientific datasets
Exabit (Eb or Ebit):
- Measures data transfer (data in motion)
- 1 Eb = 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bits
- Used for: global network capacity, extreme bandwidth
- 1 exbibyte = 9.4 exabits (since 1 byte = 8 bits)
Real-world example:
- Scientific storage: 10 EiB supercomputer storage
- Network capacity: 1 Eb/s global research network
Note: The Bit is part of the imperial/US customary system, primarily used in the US, UK, and Canada for everyday measurements. The Exbibyte belongs to the imperial/US customary system.
History of the Bit and Exbibyte
Ancient Origins: The Binary Concept
Long before computers, the concept of binary (two-state) systems existed:
- I Ching (9th Century BC): Ancient Chinese divination text used broken and unbroken lines (yin and yang) to form hexagrams, essentially 6-bit binary codes. The sequence of hexagrams (0 to 63) perfectly matches the modern binary count from 000000 to 111111.
- Pingala (2nd Century BC): Indian scholar who used binary numbers (short and long syllables) to classify poetic meters.
- Morse Code (1830s): Used dots and dashes to encode text. While not strictly binary (it relies on timing/pauses), it demonstrated that complex messages could be built from two simple signals.
- Braille (1824): A 6-bit binary code used for touch reading. Each character is a 2x3 grid where dots are either raised (1) or flat (0).
17th-19th Century: Mathematical Foundation
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1679): The German polymath formalized the modern binary number system. He saw a spiritual significance in it: 1 represented God and 0 represented the void. He showed that any number could be represented using only 0s and 1s. He was amazed to discover that his binary system matched the I Ching hexagrams.
- George Boole (1847): The English mathematician published "The Mathematical Analysis of Logic," creating Boolean Algebra. This system of logic (True/False, AND, OR, NOT) became the operating manual for modern computer processors a century later. Boole proved that logic could be reduced to simple algebra.
20th Century: The Birth of the Bit
- 1937: Claude Shannon, a master's student at MIT, wrote "A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits." He proved that electrical switches (relays) could implement Boolean algebra to perform any logical or numerical operation. This is arguably the most important master's thesis of the 20th century—it bridged the gap between abstract logic and physical machines.
- 1947: John W. Tukey, a statistician at Bell Labs, was working with early computers. Tired of writing "binary digit," he shortened it to "bit." (He also coined the term "software"!).
- 1948: Claude Shannon published "A Mathematical Theory of Communication." This paper founded Information Theory. He adopted Tukey's term "bit" as the fundamental unit of measure for information entropy. Shannon defined the bit not just as a digit, but as a measure of uncertainty resolution.
The 8-Bit Standard
In the early days of computing, machines used various "word" sizes (groups of bits) ranging from 4 to 60 bits.
- 4-bit (Nibble): Intel 4004 (first microprocessor).
- 6-bit: Common for early character sets (64 characters is enough for uppercase + numbers).
- 36-bit: Common in scientific mainframes (DEC PDP-10).
- 60-bit: CDC 6600 Supercomputer.
The 8-bit byte became the industry standard with the IBM System/360 in 1964. IBM chose 8 bits because it allowed for 256 characters (EBCDIC), enough to store uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and symbols. The success of the System/360 forced the rest of the industry to standardize on 8-bit bytes, cementing the relationship that 1 Byte = 8 bits.
The "Exbi-" Prefix Origins (1998)
IEC's final binary prefix for extreme scales:
1998: IEC introduces binary prefixes (IEC 60027-2 standard):
- Kibibyte (KiB) = 1,024 bytes (2¹⁰)
- Mebibyte (MiB) = 1,048,576 bytes (2²⁰)
- Gibibyte (GiB) = 1,073,741,824 bytes (2³⁰)
- Tebibyte (TiB) = 1,099,511,627,776 bytes (2⁴⁰)
- Pebibyte (PiB) = 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes (2⁵⁰)
- Exbibyte (EiB) = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes (2⁶⁰)
The 'exbi-' prefix:
- "Exbi-" from "exa binary"
- Represents 2⁶⁰ (the highest binary prefix defined)
- Provides precision for the largest conceivable data measurements
Before IEC: The Exabyte Ambiguity Crisis (1990s)
Confusion at the highest scales of computing:
1990s: Exabyte emergence:
- First discussions of exabyte-scale storage systems
- Scientific computing reached petabyte scale
- Internet growth created exabyte-scale data flows
1990s: Binary vs. decimal confusion:
- Scientific computing: Used binary exabytes (EiB)
- General computing: Mixed decimal/binary usage
- No standard terminology: "Exabyte" meant different things
Modern Era (2000s-Present)
IEC standards for extreme-scale computing:
2000s: Scientific adoption:
- Supercomputing centers: Use EiB for precision
- Research institutions: Adopt binary prefixes
- Technical standards: EiB for specifications
2010s: Enterprise consideration:
- Hyperscale data centers: Consider EiB for planning
- Future projections: Use EiB for accuracy
- Technical documentation: Binary prefixes standard
2020s: Extreme scale reality:
- Global data: Reaches exabyte scale
- Scientific computing: Uses EiB precision
- Future systems: Will operate at EiB scale
Common Uses and Applications: bits vs exbibytes
Explore the typical applications for both Bit (imperial/US) and Exbibyte (imperial/US) to understand their common contexts.
Common Uses for bits
1. Internet Speed (Bandwidth)
Internet Service Providers (ISPs) universally sell speed in bits per second.
- Mbps (Megabits per second): The standard unit for home internet.
- Basic: 25 Mbps
- Fast: 100-500 Mbps
- Gbps (Gigabits per second): "Gigabit internet" or Fiber.
- Ultra-fast: 1 Gbps (1,000 Mbps)
Why not Bytes? Historically, data transmission happens serially (one bit after another). Measuring the raw stream count (bits) is technically more accurate for the engineer managing the wire. For the consumer, it also produces larger, more impressive marketing numbers (100 Mbps sounds faster than 12.5 MB/s).
2. Audio Quality (Bit Depth & Bitrate)
- Bit Depth: Determines the dynamic range (loudness resolution) of audio.
- 16-bit audio (CD quality): 65,536 volume levels ($2^{16}$).
- 24-bit audio (Studio quality): 16.7 million volume levels ($2^{24}$).
- Bitrate: The amount of data consumed per second of audio.
- 128 kbps: Standard streaming quality.
- 320 kbps: High-quality MP3.
- 1,411 kbps: Uncompressed CD audio (WAV).
3. Color Depth (Images)
The number of bits used to represent the color of a single pixel.
- 1-bit: Black and White.
- 8-bit: 256 colors (old GIF / VGA graphics).
- 24-bit: 16.7 million colors (Standard "True Color" JPG/PNG).
- 30-bit / 10-bit color: 1 billion colors (HDR video, professional photography).
4. Cryptography
Security strength is measured in bits (key length).
- 128-bit encryption: Considered strong for most commercial uses.
- 256-bit encryption: Military-grade standard (AES-256).
- 2048-bit RSA: Asymmetric encryption keys need to be much longer to offer equivalent security to symmetric keys.
When to Use exbibytes
High-Performance Computing
Supercomputing and scientific research:
Supercomputer Storage:
- Exascale systems: 10-50 EiB total capacity
- Data-intensive computing: EiB-scale scratch storage
- Long-term archives: EiB of research data
Scientific Data Management:
- Genomics: EiB-scale genome databases
- Astronomy: EiB of telescope data
- Climate modeling: EiB of simulation data
Future Storage System Design
Planning for exbibyte-scale systems:
Distributed Storage Systems:
- Ceph, GlusterFS: Support EiB-scale clusters
- GPFS Spectrum Scale: Enterprise EiB-scale storage
- Lustre: HPC EiB-scale parallel file systems
Cloud Infrastructure:
- Object storage: EiB-scale data lakes
- Cold storage: EiB of archival data
- Backup systems: EiB-scale disaster recovery
Technical Specifications
Precision in extreme-scale documentation:
Hardware Specifications:
- Storage controllers: EiB-scale capacity specifications
- Network switches: EiB-scale data handling
- Memory systems: Future EiB-scale persistent memory
Software Architecture:
- Database systems: EiB-scale data management
- Analytics platforms: EiB-scale data processing
- AI training systems: EiB-scale model storage
Additional Unit Information
About Bit (b)
What is the difference between 'b' and 'B'?
Capitalization matters immensely!
- Lowercase 'b' = bit (speed, raw data).
- Uppercase 'B' = Byte (storage, file size).
- 1 B = 8 b.
- If you see "100 MBps", that would mean 800 Mbps! (Very rare connection). Standard is "100 Mbps".
Why are there 8 bits in a byte?
It wasn't always this way. Early computers used 4, 6, 9, 12, 36, or 60 bits per word. The 8-bit byte won out in the 1960s/70s because:
- Powers of 2: 8 is $2^3$, making it computationally efficient.
- Character Sets: 8 bits allows for 256 distinct values ($2^8$). This was enough to store all English letters (uppercase/lowercase), numbers, punctuation, and control codes (ASCII requires 7 bits), with room to spare for extended characters (accents, symbols).
- IBM System/360: The dominant mainframe of the era standardized on 8-bit bytes, and the rest of the industry followed suit to be compatible.
What is a Qubit?
A Qubit (Quantum Bit) is the basic unit of quantum computing.
- Classical Bit: Must be 0 OR 1.
- Qubit: Can be 0, 1, or BOTH simultaneously (Superposition). This allows quantum computers to solve certain complex problems exponentially faster than classical computers.
What is the "Most Significant Bit" (MSB)?
In a sequence of bits (like a byte), the MSB is the bit with the highest value (usually the leftmost bit).
- Example Byte:
10000001 - Left '1' (MSB): Represents 128 (in unsigned binary).
- Right '1' (LSB - Least Significant Bit): Represents 1. Changing the MSB changes the value drastically (from 129 to 1). Changing the LSB changes it slightly (from 129 to 128).
How many bits are in a UUID?
A UUID (Universally Unique Identifier), often used in software to identify database records, is 128 bits long.
- Example:
123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426614174000 - The number of possible UUIDs is $2^{128} \approx 3.4 \times 10^{38}$.
- This is so large that you could generate 1 billion UUIDs per second for 85 years and have a negligible chance of a duplicate.
Is there anything smaller than a bit?
In classical information theory, no. The bit is the atom of information—you cannot have "half a choice." However, in physical implementation, bits are represented by thousands of electrons. But logically, the bit is the floor.
What is "Bit Rot"?
Bit rot (or data degradation) refers to the slow deterioration of storage media over time.
- Magnetic Media (HDDs/Tapes): Magnetic domains can lose their orientation over decades.
- Optical Media (CDs/DVDs): The dye layer breaks down.
- SSDs: Charge leaks from the floating gates if unpowered for years. This causes bits to flip from 0 to 1 (or vice versa), corrupting files. This is why long-term archival storage requires regular maintenance and error-correction codes.
What is a "Sticky Bit"?
In Unix/Linux file systems, the sticky bit is a permission bit. When set on a directory (like /tmp), it ensures that only the file's owner (or root) can delete or rename the file, even if other users have write permission to the directory. It's a single bit of metadata that controls security behavior.
About Exbibyte (EiB)
How many bytes are in an exbibyte (EiB)?
There are exactly 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes in 1 exbibyte (EiB). This is the definition established by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) in 1998. The exbibyte uses the binary prefix "exbi-" which represents 2⁶⁰ (the highest binary prefix defined). This is an astronomically large number, representing the theoretical limit of many current computing systems.
What is the difference between EiB and EB?
EiB (exbibyte) equals exactly 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes (2⁶⁰) using the IEC binary prefix system. EB (exabyte) equals exactly 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes (10¹⁸) using the SI decimal prefix system. An exbibyte is approximately 15.3% larger than an exabyte (1 EiB ≈ 1.153 EB).
This distinction becomes critical at exabyte scale:
- Scientific computing uses EiB for precision
- Cloud providers advertise in EB (decimal)
- 100 EB of cloud storage = 86.7 EiB of actual binary capacity
How many pebibytes are in an exbibyte?
There are exactly 1,024 pebibytes (PiB) in 1 exbibyte (EiB). This follows the IEC binary prefix system where each larger unit is 1,024 times the previous unit. The relationship is: 1 EiB = 1,024 PiB = 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes.
How many tebibytes are in an exbibyte?
There are 1,048,576 tebibytes (TiB) in 1 exbibyte (EiB). Using the binary progression: 1 EiB = 1,024 PiB, and 1 PiB = 1,024 TiB, so 1 EiB = 1,024 × 1,024 TiB = 1,048,576 TiB. This represents an astronomically large storage capacity.
What uses exbibyte-scale storage?
Current and future applications at EiB scale:
Scientific Supercomputing:
- Frontier (Oak Ridge): 5 EiB storage capacity
- Aurora (Argonne): 3 EiB storage capacity
- Future exascale systems: 10-50 EiB capacity
Global Cloud Infrastructure:
- Major cloud providers: 100-500 EiB total capacity
- Global content delivery: 50+ EiB edge caching
- Future hyperscale: 1,000+ EiB capacity
Scientific Research:
- Square Kilometre Array: 1 EiB daily data generation
- Large Synoptic Survey Telescope: 0.5 EiB annual data
- Future neuroscience projects: 0.1-1 EiB datasets
Is EiB used in consumer applications?
EiB is almost exclusively used in technical and scientific contexts, not consumer applications. Consumers typically encounter:
- EB (decimal) for global data statistics
- TB (decimal) for storage device marketing
- GB (decimal) for everyday storage measurements
However, EiB appears in:
- Scientific publications and research papers
- Technical specifications for supercomputers
- Future planning documents for extreme-scale systems
- Standards organizations and technical committees
What comes after EiB?
The IEC binary prefix system currently defines EiB as the largest unit (2⁶⁰). Future extensions might include:
- Zebibyte (ZiB) = 2⁷⁰ bytes (potentially)
- Yobibyte (YiB) = 2⁸⁰ bytes (potentially)
However, these remain theoretical as current technology hasn't reached ZiB scale. The decimal system continues with:
- Zettabyte (ZB) = 10²¹ bytes
- Yottabyte (YB) = 10²⁴ bytes
How does EiB relate to real-world data?
Context for EiB scale:
- Global internet traffic: ~200 EB annually (~173 EiB)
- All human knowledge: ~0.02 EB (~0.017 EiB)
- Major cloud provider: 100+ EB (~87 EiB)
- Scientific supercomputer: 5 EiB storage capacity
At EiB scale, we enter theoretical limits of current computing technology and data management capabilities.
Conversion Table: Bit to Exbibyte
| Bit (b) | Exbibyte (EiB) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0 |
| 1 | 0 |
| 1.5 | 0 |
| 2 | 0 |
| 5 | 0 |
| 10 | 0 |
| 25 | 0 |
| 50 | 0 |
| 100 | 0 |
| 250 | 0 |
| 500 | 0 |
| 1,000 | 0 |
People Also Ask
How do I convert Bit to Exbibyte?
To convert Bit to Exbibyte, enter the value in Bit in the calculator above. The conversion will happen automatically. Use our free online converter for instant and accurate results. You can also visit our data storage converter page to convert between other units in this category.
Learn more →What is the conversion factor from Bit to Exbibyte?
The conversion factor depends on the specific relationship between Bit and Exbibyte. You can find the exact conversion formula and factor on this page. Our calculator handles all calculations automatically. See the conversion table above for common values.
Can I convert Exbibyte back to Bit?
Yes! You can easily convert Exbibyte back to Bit by using the swap button (⇌) in the calculator above, or by visiting our Exbibyte to Bit converter page. You can also explore other data storage conversions on our category page.
Learn more →What are common uses for Bit and Exbibyte?
Bit and Exbibyte are both standard units used in data storage measurements. They are commonly used in various applications including engineering, construction, cooking, and scientific research. Browse our data storage converter for more conversion options.
For more data storage conversion questions, visit our FAQ page or explore our conversion guides.
Helpful Conversion Guides
Learn more about unit conversion with our comprehensive guides:
📚 How to Convert Units
Step-by-step guide to unit conversion with practical examples.
🔢 Conversion Formulas
Essential formulas for data storage and other conversions.
⚖️ Metric vs Imperial
Understand the differences between measurement systems.
⚠️ Common Mistakes
Learn about frequent errors and how to avoid them.
All Data Storage Conversions
Other Data Storage Units and Conversions
Explore other data storage units and their conversion options:
Verified Against Authority Standards
All conversion formulas have been verified against international standards and authoritative sources to ensure maximum accuracy and reliability.
International Electrotechnical Commission — Binary prefixes for digital storage (KiB, MiB, GiB)
International Organization for Standardization — International standards for quantities and units
Last verified: February 19, 2026