-- Take a heavy object and a stopwatch.
-- Start the timer as you drop the object from the unknown height.
-- Stop the timer when the object hits the ground.
-- Read the time off the watch, in seconds. Square it. (Multiply it by itself.)
-- Multiply that result by 16.1 .
-- Now you have the distance the object fell, in feet.
By length width and height
It is easiest to measure the length, breadth and height and multiply them together.
To measure length, height, width of an object.
Measure the length, measure the width, measure the height, and multiply them all together. LxWxH = volume
-- Measure length, width, and height. -- Multiply (length) times (width) times (height). -- The result is the volume of the box-shaped object.
An object's height is the measure of the distance between its lowest point and its highest point expressed in linear units.
Use trignometry
"Displacement sensors measure the distance an object moves and they can also be used to measure object height and width".
By length width and height
It is easiest to measure the length, breadth and height and multiply them together.
a clinometer is used to measure the height of an object such as a tree
To measure length, height, width of an object.
Measure the length, measure the width, measure the height, and multiply them all together. LxWxH = volume
Volume = length x width x height... or aria times height
-- measure the length, width, and height of the object -- multiply the three numbers together -- the answer is the volume of the object
-- Measure length, width, and height. -- Multiply (length) times (width) times (height). -- The result is the volume of the box-shaped object.
multiply it Length- Width - Height , or measure the volume of a container of water then stick the object in and measure the volume of the object+water then subtract the volume of the water then you have the volume