Terabyte

Multiples of bytes
as defined by IEC 60027-2
SI prefix   Binary prefixes
NameSymbolMultiple NameSymbolMultiple
kilobytekB103 kibibyteKiB (or KB)210
megabyteMB106 (or 220) mebibyteMiB220
gigabyteGB109 (or 230) gibibyteGiB230
terabyteTB1012 (or 240) tebibyteTiB240
petabytePB1015 (or 250) pebibytePiB250
exabyteEB1018 (or 260) exbibyteEiB260
zettabyteZB1021 (or 270) zebibyteZiB270
yottabyteYB1024 (or 280) yobibyteYiB280

A terabyte (derived from the SI prefix tera-) is a measurement term for data storage capacity equal to approximately one trillion (short scale) bytes. It is commonly abbreviated TB.

Because of irregularities in using the binary prefix in the definition and usage of the kilobyte, the exact number in common practice could be either one of the following:

  • 1,000,000,000,000 bytes – 10004 or 1012.
  • 1,099,511,627,776 bytes – 10244 or 240. (This capacity may be expressed unambiguously as a tebibyte.)

The prefix "tera" originates from the Greek word teras meaning 'monster'.

Terabytes in use

  • A 'typical' video store may contain about 8 terabytes of video data.
  • The books in the U.S. Library of Congress contain approximately 20 terabytes of text.

Personal computers containing a terabyte or more of storage space have recently become possible using combinations of high-capacity mass-market hard drives. As of April 2005, common commercial hard drives exceeded 400 gigabytes in size, so storage capacity totalling a terabyte or more can be reached using as few as 2 or 3 hard disks, at a street cost of as little as USD $450, down from over USD $1000 in 2003. (source: www.newegg.com)

See also

de:Speicherkapazität es:Terabyte fr:Téraoctet it:Terabyte nl:Terabyte sv:Terabyte zh:TB