divide the beam into three rectangles, calculate the area of each rectangle and multiply it by length. then you get the volume of beam & finally multiply it by density
150*150*10thk h beam weight per meter
It is not possible to calculate the area given only the volume.
You cannot calculate volume of surface area. If you meant 20m3, then the volume would be 20,000 litres.
Not enough information. To calculate mass, you would need volume and density (mass = volume x density).
V=Area*Length
divide the beam into three rectangles, calculate the area of each rectangle and multiply it by length. then you get the volume of beam & finally multiply it by density
For mass you use a triple-beam balance and for volume you use a graduated cylinder
You can consider the beam to be a rectangular block. In other words, simply multiply length x width x height.
For mass, you would use a triple-beam balance. For volume, you would either use a graduated cylinder (for liquids), calculate the displacement with a graduated cylinder (for an odd-shaped solid), or calculate it using the equation for volume (for a regularly-shaped solid).
mass (on a triple-beam balance) volume (water displacement, calculate it with a ruler) density (mass/volume) color transparency state of matter
Depends on the dimensions of the beam. length * width * height
No, a triple balance beam will measure the mass of an object but not its volume.
The answer depends on the cross-sectional area of the beam.
Calculate the volume of one sweet. Calculate the volume of the jar and then divide the volume of the jar by the volume of a sweet.
the beam has a total volume of 60ft 3 what is the maximium horizontal gap that the beam can span
Google: " beam spread rectangular transducer probe"