yes
The surface area of a box, which is a cuboid, depends on its length, width and height. A cube is a special type of cuboid in which the length , width and height are all the same.
Because an object can only have one value for its surface area.
No. "surface area" or "specific surface area" is a value, not viewable and it can be analysis by gas sorption analyzers (such as static volumetric principle analyzer V-Sorb 2800P). But, the "surface" is viewable.
The same as before. The newly exposed faces replace the lost faces, and since each face of a cube has the same area, the total remains unchanged. In fact you could even remove a cuboid rather than cube, and leave the surface area unchanged.
The depth would have to have a value of 1. For example, a slab 60" long by 24" wide by 1" deep would have the same surface area as volume. Examples: Area = LxW (60x24=1440 sq inches). Volume = LXWXD (60x24x1=1440 cubic inches). In this case, the volume has the same value as the surface area
figures with the same volume does not have the same surface area.
There is no reason for the surface area to remain the same even if the volume is the same.
False. The surface area formula for a right cone is not the same as the surface area formula for an oblique cone.
Given a cuboid it is always possible to have a cylinder with the same volume.
No
no
Yes. A cuboid is also a rectangular prism