If the other dimensions (length and height) are left unchanged, doubling the width will double the volume.
you cant answer this wuestion because in order to answer it, you need to find the volume in thte cintainer. the formula for finding the volume it length x width x height. you just have the width and height.
Many simple two-dimensional figures are described using its length and width. Weight only refers to 3D objects as well does volume.
Depends on the shape. Basically, multiply the length times the width times the height, but there are many ways to do that.
If rectangular: Lenght X Width X Average Depth X 7.5 = Volume in gallons.
work out the volume of the cube using length x width x height. If the 2-D measurements are in metres then convert the volume units into gallons. m3
Volume has three dimensions - width, height and depth.
You need to do length times width times the height to get the volume.
You can find the volume by using a model by counting how many cubes are in the front and multiply it by the width. Kinda like length x width x height.
For a box, the dimensions the define a volume would be:Height, Width, and DepthFor a cylinder, the dimensions that define a volume would be:Height and Diameter
Five. Length, width, height, surface area, and volume
Well, honey, to find the length, width, and height with the volume, you'll need to know the formula for the shape you're dealing with. For a rectangular prism, you can use the formula V = lwh, where V is the volume, l is the length, w is the width, and h is the height. Just plug in the volume and two of the dimensions, then solve for the third. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
To figure out the surface area of a reactangular prism you have to multiply length x width and then multiply that by how many faces it has, to figure out volume you multiply the length x width x height of the prism and than you will find your answer!!!!!
you cant answer this wuestion because in order to answer it, you need to find the volume in thte cintainer. the formula for finding the volume it length x width x height. you just have the width and height.
Many simple two-dimensional figures are described using its length and width. Weight only refers to 3D objects as well does volume.
I'm not completely sure but I think it's like this. Doubling 1 would be 2. Doubling 2 would be 4. Doubling 4 would be 8. Doubling 8 would be 16. Doubling 16 would be 32. Doubling 32 would be 64. (
Having the volume of an object is not enough to determine the dimensions. The basic formula for volume is obtained by multiplying the height, width and length. There are many combinations that will result in the same volume. And it is even more difficult if the object is irregular in shape.
That depends a lot on what you want to measure: the cow's length, width, volume, mass, density, color, ...