(pi * r2 * h ) / 3
Or: one-third * height * area of the base circle
Note: height is the perpendicular height (ie: an imaginary line from the centre of the base circle to the point at the top), not the length of the "side" (ie: from the edge of the circle to the tip)
Capacity or volume of a cone = 1/3*pi*radius2*height measured in cubic units
-- milliliter -- liter -- cubic centimeter -- cubic meter
You can take any linear measure and cube it. There is no theoretical limit to how big your units can be, for example, cubic meters, cubic kilometers, cubic light-years, cubic megaparsecs, cubic gigaparsecs... whatever you wish.
Cubic kilometres.
Cubic metres.
You could measure volume in cubic centimeters.
Volume of a cone in cubic units = 1/3*base area*height
If you mean the units, capacity, or volume, is expressed in cubic meters, cubic decimeters (= liters), cubic centimeters (= milliliters), etc.
Capacity (volume) can be measured in many units, including . . . -- milliliters -- cubic centimeters -- liters -- cubic meters -- cubic kilometers -- fluid ounces -- cubic inches -- cubic feet -- cubic yards -- cubic miles -- pints -- quarts -- cups -- gallons
It is its cubic capacity
Probably the cubic megaparsec.
CC- cubic centimeters, used mainly to measure oil capacity and engine size. Like CI (cubic inches) is used to measure the size of bigger engines.