26.46
Rectangles, being two-dimensional, don't have volume. The volume of the object you're describing is 240 cubic centimeters.
You aslo need to know the density of the matter being calculated. multiply the density by the volume to get the weight
Rectangles, being two-dimensional objects, do not have volume. Rectangular prisms, on the other hand, do. The equation for their volume is length*width*height, or lwh.
It depends on what is being measured. The instruments and units used for measuring the length, width and height of a building would be different to those used for a matchbox!
The formula for a rectangular prism's volume is: V=Bh. B meaning the area of the base, and h being the height.
Block being a box: Height * Length * Depth = Volume Giving the three dimensions available.
The volume of a rectangular prism is found by; Volume = Length x Width x Height The volume of a triangular prism is found by; Volume = 1/2 x Length x Width x Height Therefore, Length, Width and Height being identical, 1) the volume of a rectangular prism is twice that of a similar triangular prism OR 2) the colume of a triangular prism is half that of a similar rectangular prism.
volume of cuboid = height * width * length volume = 20 * 8 =160 cm ^ 3
Squares, being two-dimensional, don't have volume. They have area, length x width, or one side squared. Cubes have volume. Length x width x height or one side cubed.
Rectangles, being two-dimensional, don't have volume. The volume of the object you're describing is 240 cubic centimeters.
its the volume of a cube with the length width and height all being 1cm its the volume of a cube with the length width and height all being 1cm
You aslo need to know the density of the matter being calculated. multiply the density by the volume to get the weight
Height x length x width. 5 x 3 x 9=135 iff i do make my self clear
Rectangles, being two-dimensional objects, do not have volume. Rectangular prisms, on the other hand, do. The equation for their volume is length*width*height, or lwh.
Simply find the length of pipe that makes the bend and the look up the volume in a place like Crane's Technical Paper No. 410. To find the length of the pipe, use the formula S=R(theta) with R being the radius to the center of the pipe and theta, the angle of the bend (in radians). S will be the length in the same units as R. Thanks, Michael
It depends on what is being measured. The instruments and units used for measuring the length, width and height of a building would be different to those used for a matchbox!
The volume of a rectangular prism is given by V=l*w*h. Therfore if the volume is 200, the length is 4 and the width is 5 the equation becomes 200=5*4*h 200=20h h=10cm