Yes, there is.
equally likely means as likely as the other side ex: 1 piece of candy on this side,1 piece of candy on that side
1 cent
The mass of a 1 cm piece of pine wood depends on the density of the pine wood. To calculate the mass, you would multiply the density of the pine wood by the volume of the 1 cm piece (which is 1 cm^3 for a cube). So, mass = density x volume.
1m = 100 cm 1 sq m = 1 m × 1 m = 100 cm × 100 cm = 10,000 cm² 10 cm × 10 cm = 100 cm² → 1 sq m ÷ 100 cm² 10,000 cm² ÷ 100 cm² = 100 → weight the piece of cloth that is 10 cm by 10 cm in grams and multiple it by 100 to find out how many grams a piece of the same cloth which is 1 m by 1 m (1 square metre in area) weighs. You then know its gsm.
you should bew able to though we do not no the area of the box so the candy bar may need to be broken into piceses heres what i did to find your answer: 8*5*1=40 volume of the candy bar
The major axis of an M&M is .6 cm.
1 Centimeter!
1 gram
70 CM
Rock candy typically has around 1 gram of sugar per piece. The total weight of rock candy can vary, but a single piece is usually around 10-15 grams.
The piece of candy is at the plaza.
There is no piece of candy.