6
Four.
The volume of the cube is 216 ft3 but there is nothing to compare it with.
A cube with a volume of 8.61 cubic feet can hold 244 liters.
There are an infinite number of solids with a volume of 24 cubic cm. Cuboids with sides of (1,1,24), (1,2,12), (1,3,8), (1,4,6), (2,2,6), (2,3,4) are some. In addition, there are cuboids with sides of fractional length, such as (1,2.4,10), (.1,1,240), (.01,1,2400) etc. And then there are other polyhedra such as tetrahedrons (pyramids), spheres, cones, cylinders, prisms and many many more.
700
Twenty
Four.
Volume of cube = 2*2*2 = 8 cm3 Volume of cuboid = 10*6*8 = 480 cm3 So number of cubes in cuboid = 480/8 = 60
The volume of the cube is 216 ft3 but there is nothing to compare it with.
That would obviously depend on how big you want your cuboids.
There is 10 different nets for a cuboid I hope this helped and since a cube has all the same sides then that means a cuboid must have less since not all sides are even! IT IS NOT 11!!! :)
A cube with a volume of 8.61 cubic feet can hold 244 liters.
476748 not ha ha
There are an infinite number of solids with a volume of 24 cubic cm. Cuboids with sides of (1,1,24), (1,2,12), (1,3,8), (1,4,6), (2,2,6), (2,3,4) are some. In addition, there are cuboids with sides of fractional length, such as (1,2.4,10), (.1,1,240), (.01,1,2400) etc. And then there are other polyhedra such as tetrahedrons (pyramids), spheres, cones, cylinders, prisms and many many more.
700
None. A milliltre cube is a measure in 9-dimensional hyperspace! A metre cube is a measure of volume in "normal" 3-dimensional space. According to basic dimensional analysis, conversion between measures with different dimensions is not valid.
There are many possible answers:Hexagonal pyramidQuadrilateral based bipyramidHexahedrons (including cuboids and cubes)There are many possible answers:Hexagonal pyramidQuadrilateral based bipyramidHexahedrons (including cuboids and cubes)There are many possible answers:Hexagonal pyramidQuadrilateral based bipyramidHexahedrons (including cuboids and cubes)There are many possible answers:Hexagonal pyramidQuadrilateral based bipyramidHexahedrons (including cuboids and cubes)