If it displaces 8 ml of water then its its volume is equal to
the volume of water it displaces, 8 ml or 8 cubic centimeters
Volume is length*width*height in cubic units. If this is not possible then when an object is immersed in water the water displaced is equal to the volume of the object which was discovered by Archimedes.
Metric units of volume include the cubic meter, cubic centimeter, cubic millimeter, milliliter, cubic kilometer, and liter. When used to express the volume of a space or object, the shape of the object is completely irrelevant.
A object weighing 10 pounds with a volume of 1 cubic foot will sink until 0.16 of its volume is under water, and the remaining 0.84 of its volume is above the surface. At that point, the weight of the displaced water is (0.16 cubic foot) x (62.5 pounds/cubic foot) = 10 pounds, and the object will float at that depth, and sink no further.
The buoyant force is equal to the amount of water displaced. Multiply the volume of the object by the density of water - then convert that to a force (at about 9.8 newton/kilogram).
The measure, in cubic centimetres IS the volume!
The cubic volume occupied by a shipment in Cubic Meters is referred to as the shipments cbm. Note, it is cubic volume occupied, not the volume that would be displaced if placed in a water bath. An odd shaped package would occupy a much larger volume than its pure cubic volume.
If the object hsa sunk the volume is equal to the volume of water displaced If the tank is 50 cm high, the volume is 150x100x (36.2-30) = 93000 cubic centimeters
The volume of a of a 3-d object is the number of cubic needed to fill the object.
Cubic displacement inches (the volume in inches displaced by the piston/s).
The cubic volume occupied by a shipment in Cubic Meters is referred to as the shipments cbm. Note, it is cubic volume occupied, not the volume that would be displaced if placed in a water bath. An odd shaped package would occupy a much larger volume than its pure cubic volume.
The amount of space is called the object's VOLUME. You can express volume in cubic meters, cubic decimeters (= liters), cubic centimeters (= ml), cubic feet, gallons, or any other unit of volume.
It is the volume of the object.