43,500 X 4 = 174,000 cubic feet and a there are 7.48 gallons in cubic foot, so
174,000 x 7.47 = 1,301,520 gallons ( over a million gallons).
1.6042 square feet (rounded)
350
One cubic meter cannot be "converted" to a square measure unless we know how "deep" it is being spread. For example, if it is one meter deep, then it would cover one square meter; but if it is two meters deep, then it would cover half that area. If it were, say, 1 cm deep, then it could cover a million square centimeters (100 x 100 x 100).
An infinite amount - if the box is deep enough.
You are mixing volume (square yard) and area (length x width). How deep do you want the dirt? One foot deep you need about 80 square yards of dirt.
1.6042 square feet (rounded)
How deep do you want that ?If you want it 1.6 inches deep, then it can cover 1 square foot.If you want it 10-ft deep, then it can't cover that much area.
The cold would affect it from growing in the deep water and depending on how deep the it would receive less and less sunlight which it needs to grow
That would be Deep Purple.
Shallow water is more dense than Deep water. This means that a wave travelling from deep water to shallow water would bend towards the normal. Also, the wave would travel slower in the shallow than in the deep water
The question as posed is unanswerable. In order to compute the weight of an inch of water, one would have to know the volume, or area the one inch covers. (ie., a square foot of water one inch deep would weigh=X)
350
It is not possible to answer the question. The floor of most swimming pools do not have a constant slope from the shallow to the deep end. Second, the amount of water that a pool can hold cannot be measured in square metres - which a measure of area - not of volume.
That depends on how deep it is. If it's 1 meter (100 cm) deep, then it covers 21 square meters (about 226 square feet). If it's 1 centimeter deep, then it covers 2,100 square meters ... about 1/5th of a hectare, or about 1/2 of an acre.
An infinite amount - if the box is deep enough.
11,746 pounds (5.87 tons) per square inch.
One cubic meter cannot be "converted" to a square measure unless we know how "deep" it is being spread. For example, if it is one meter deep, then it would cover one square meter; but if it is two meters deep, then it would cover half that area. If it were, say, 1 cm deep, then it could cover a million square centimeters (100 x 100 x 100).