No. For a volume you must have a cubic function.
volume of the cube - volume of the sphere = volume enclosed between the cube and sphere
let edge of the cube be {x} radius of the sphere inside the cube= x/2 volume of the cube=x^3 volume the sphere=4pi/3*r^3 =4/3*22/7*r^3/8 ratio of the volume=x^3/11x^3/21 =21/11 ans.= 21:11
Square is to cube as circle is to.......sphere
The area of a circle is 'pi' multiplied by the square of the circle's radius.The volume of a circle is zero.The volume of a sphere is (4/3 pi) multiplied by the cube of the sphere's radius.
No. The surface to volume ratio of a sphere is always smaller than that of a cube. This is because the sphere has the smallest surface area compared to its volume, while the cube has the largest surface area compared to its volume.
The cube has a larger volume.
Volume of cube = (side length )3 Volume of a sphere = 4/3*pi*r3 Looks like the sphere by a long shot, but let's see. Volume cube = (4)3 64 === The sphere has more volume.
a cube and a sphere are different because is more of a square shape and a sphere is cylindrical
square - cube as circle - sphere
1.91, About double or A sphere that touches a cube at six points (fits in it) is about .52 times as big as the cube. A comparable cube is about twice as big as a sphere, in common lingo. Ladd P.
2r3, because if you have a radius touching all six sides, you could then double this to get the diameter of the sphere, which would be 2r, then this would be, being a cube, the length of every edge of the cube, which we cube or put to the 3rd power, to find volume.
volume is to a cube volume is to a cube