cubed units
No I can't answer it. I'm afraid it does not make sense. The centimetre volume unit is the cubic centimetre, or c.c.
A figure that has an area of 5 units [base x height] has the obvious dimensions 1 and 5 since 5 is a prime number. If the figure is a rectangle then the dimensions can be : length= 5 height= 1. Area= 5 x1= 5cm^2 Perimeter= 5+5+1+1=12cm
The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.
9
If the marbles are identical, the volume is the same. If you want, you can use different units and it looks like the volume is different.
No I can't answer it. I'm afraid it does not make sense. The centimetre volume unit is the cubic centimetre, or c.c.
A figure that has an area of 5 units [base x height] has the obvious dimensions 1 and 5 since 5 is a prime number. If the figure is a rectangle then the dimensions can be : length= 5 height= 1. Area= 5 x1= 5cm^2 Perimeter= 5+5+1+1=12cm
density is mass/volume so if you multiply the volume you want to convert you get mass but you have to make sure that the volume units are the same
The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.The first step is to figure out what shape the net will make when converted to 3-dimensions. Then, if you are lucky, there will be a suitable formula for finding the volume of such a shape.
No, grams and kilograms are units of mass/weight. Cubic meters are a unit of volume.
There are 4 of them.
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If the marbles are identical, the volume is the same. If you want, you can use different units and it looks like the volume is different.
Density=mass/volume.......but make sure units match up.
This is not a valid conversion. Cubic units is a measure of volume while square units is a measure of area.
There is no general conversion between units of volume (such as liters) and units of mass (such as milligrams). For a specific substance, you can look up or measure the density, then use the formula: mass = volume x density You may need to convert some units, to make them compatible.
Density is mass per volume. Take the volume and multiply it by the density. Make sure the units used are the same.