There is no single formula to calculate this. It much depends on hardware, OS, platform, versions of framework, version of Windows etc. Each object has also got a bunch of stuff associated with it - pointers to the type, methods, thread, app domain, memory address, syncroot object for locking. So there is no 100% accurate measure.
This will provide you with a lower bound. Your actuall object will take slightly more.
There are other ways to calculate this, such as using Interops, but at the end of the day, they will just give an estimate as well (see How to get object size in memory? and Find size of object instance in bytes in c#).
So an estimate, on my machine (x64, compiled for ANY CPU, running as x64 bit process, Windows Server 2012 R2, .NET 4.5) this was
[Serializable]
class Node
{
byte[][] a;
int[] b;
List<Node> c;
public Node()
{
a = new byte[3][];
b = new int[3];
c = new List<Node>(0);
}
}
[Test]
public void GetSize()
{
Node item = new Node();
object o = new object();
long size = 0;
using (Stream s = new MemoryStream())
{
BinaryFormatter formatter = new BinaryFormatter();
formatter.Serialize(s, item);
size = s.Length; // <<<<< 918 bytes on my machine
}
}