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Yes they would have to be similar cubes.
A full milk carton has more density compared to an empty milk carton. Density is defined as mass per unit volume, so when the milk carton is full, it contains more mass within the same volume compared to when it is empty. Therefore, the full milk carton will have a higher density than the empty milk carton.
Assuming you are using the same unit of measurement for the cubes and the boxes, you can fit 125 cubes in the box.
It would be the same, 1,000,000, as each one's length is 1cm
The total volume of two cubes of the same size is: 250 cubic feet.
It is not possible to answer this question since there is no standard size for ice. Furthermore, most ice cubes that are made in a fridge or freezer are not cubes but cuboids or even parallelepipeds: their sides are not all the same.
Square ice cubes, octagon ice cubes, and hexagon ice cubes will melt at the same rate, assuming they are all the same size and made of the same material. The shape of the ice cube does not significantly impact the rate at which it melts.
Depends on the size and shape, but they all melt the same way
Two cubes are exactly the same size. The cube that is made of the material with the largest density will have the largest mass.
No, the volume of milk remains the same when transferred from a carton to a bowl as long as no spillage or evaporation occurs. The amount of milk poured out of the carton into the bowl is equal to the amount initially in the carton.
It stays the same.
As long as the cubes are 1x1x1 then any box with an equivalent volume would hold the same number of cubes. The volume of the 3x4x10 box is 120. So a box with the dimensions 1x1x120 would work just as well as a box with the dimensions 12x10x1 or 2x5x12.