125,000 litres.
the sides of the cubical box would be 7 meters
This depends entirely upon the maximum capacity of your kettle. It should tell you on the side.
Yes.
1 000 000 cubes would be held. 1 000 litres of water.
125,000,000,000
27000 mL
the sides of the cubical box would be 7 meters
It is 0.015625 millilitres.
1000 - with a little space left over.
10
This depends entirely upon the maximum capacity of your kettle. It should tell you on the side.
A cube 46.4 meters or 152 feet on a side is required to hold 100 million liters of water.
Yes.
That is a lot of oil. You will need a "large" tank. If you need a tank to fit that amount of oil, you should search for tanks based on that criteria. For reference, that amount of oil would fit in a cubical tank 3.3 meters on a side.
1 000 000 cubes would be held. 1 000 litres of water.
The volume of an oblong is: volume = length x width x height As the box is cubical, ie is a cube, all sides are of equal length, thus: volume_cube = side x side x side = side3 So, given the volume: side = cube_root(volume) ie, take the cube root of the volume of 2.197cm3.
Cubic decimeters (dm3) and liters are equal measures of volume: 8.0 cubic decimeters equals 8.0 liters.