To find the surface area of a square (or rectangle) you multiply the length times the width. Then to get the total area of a cube you add up the surface areas of all the square sides it has. I hope you can figure it out from there.
Yes Volume: Is the amount it takes to build it. Surface Area: Is how much is on the surface.
The total surface area of a 100 by 100 cm cube is 60,000 square centimeters. Each smaller cube has a surface area of 6 square centimeters for a total of 6,000,000 square centimeters. This is a gain of 5,940,000 square centimeters.
Manitoba has a surface water area 39,225 square miles or about 15.6% of the total area.
The pressure of gravity on a surface is(total force of gravity on the surface) divided by (area of the surface)
Let's imagine the following objects first: Sugar cubes are solid blocks, each with a comparatively larger volume. Granulated sugar is fine and particulate, and each grain has a very small volume. It is only logical that when comparing one block of sugar to one grain of sugar, that the grain dissolves faster because it has a smaller volume (less to dissolve), and the surface area to volume ratio is much higher.
Rectangles provide a larger surface area which support more weight and provides a much more stable structure.
Mars only has about 28% the surface area of the Earth. What's interesting is that number matches the land area of Earth, so the total surface of Mars is roughly the same as the dry land surface of Earth.
The moon has a total surface area of about 37.9 million square kilometers.
the surface of the moon is 0.074 of earth's surface area
Surface area.
Volume is how much an object can store - like how much can you put inside a box. Surface area is the sum of the area of an objects surfaces - such as if you have a box, find the area of one side. Then you just multiply it by 6 (because a box have 6 faces) to get the total area of an object's surface.
The Pacific Ocean covers about 28% of the global surface. It is larger than the total land area of the world.