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Petabyte

A petabyte (PB) is a unit of digital information storage equal to 10^15 bytes. It is part of the SI prefix system, where peta denotes 10^15 and the symbol is PB. In contexts that use binary counting, the equivalent is the pebibyte (PiB), which equals 2^50 bytes, about 1.1259×10^15 bytes. Thus, 1 PiB ≈ 1.126 PB, and 1 PB ≈ 0.888 PiB.

Conversions commonly used in practice note that 1 PB equals 1,000 terabytes (TB) or 1,000,000 gigabytes (GB)

Usage of petabytes appears in descriptions of very large storage capacities and data volumes. They are typical

History and context notes: the rise of petabytes corresponds with rapid increases in data generation in the

in
decimal
terms.
In
binary
terms,
1
PiB
equals
1024
tebibytes
(TiB)
or
1,125,899,906,842,624
bytes,
roughly
1.126
PB.
The
decimal
and
binary
forms
are
close
in
magnitude
but
not
identical,
which
can
cause
confusion
in
some
contexts.
for
large-scale
data
centers,
cloud
storage
services,
and
scientific
projects
that
generate
and
archive
substantial
datasets.
For
example,
a
national
research
archive
or
a
major
photo-
and
video-collection
service
may
describe
its
capacity
in
PB
to
reflect
ongoing
growth.
2000s
and
2010s.
To
reduce
ambiguity,
many
technical
environments
distinguish
decimal
PB
from
binary
PiB,
though
consumer-facing
storage
measurements
often
quote
decimal
values.
Related
terms
include
kilobyte,
megabyte,
gigabyte,
terabyte,
exabyte,
and
their
binary
counterparts
such
as
pebibyte,
tebibyte,
and
so
on.