50 * 125 cm3 = 6250cm3
The volume of a cube is the length of the side, cubed.The area of a cube is 6 times (the length of a side squared).
With 10 cm side lengths, this cube has a volume of 1000 cm3
With great difficulty. You can only do this if each dimension of the box is an exact multiple of the side of a cube - which is extremely unlikely. However, if that miracle happens, then you fill the box with cubes and count how many cubes it takes.
The 3D volume is 8s^3. The 4d "Volume" is s^4. Btw, why do you need to know this. It took me years to figure this, and more, on my own...
A cubes volume is equal to the length of it's side^3. So if the side has length 2, the volume is 2*2*2 = 8.
The volume of a cube is the length of the side, cubed.The area of a cube is 6 times (the length of a side squared).
The volume of one sugar cube is 3*3*3 = 27 cubic cm. The volume of 30 cubes is 30*27 = 810 cubic centimetres. Incidentally, these are abnormally large cubes. Most that I have seen are at most 1 cm on each side.
Each side would be approximately 6.08 units.
no.of cubes made=volume of cuboid/volume of cube i.e, (21*27*8)/(3*3*3) = 4536/27 = 168 cubes
To find the volume of a stack of centimeter cubes you only need to have the dimension of one side. Once you get the dimension of one side you can find its cube to get the volume of the stack.
The question is incomplete, but here goes: Each small cube has side r so volume of each small cube is r3 and so volume of 27 small cubes is 27r3 The large cube has side s so volume of the large cube is s3 The volume of the small cubes must sum to that of the big cube so s3 = 27r3 So s3/r3 = 27 and so s/r = cuberoot(27) = 3
With 10 cm side lengths, this cube has a volume of 1000 cm3
With great difficulty. You can only do this if each dimension of the box is an exact multiple of the side of a cube - which is extremely unlikely. However, if that miracle happens, then you fill the box with cubes and count how many cubes it takes.
That is 25 cc.
The 3D volume is 8s^3. The 4d "Volume" is s^4. Btw, why do you need to know this. It took me years to figure this, and more, on my own...
A cubes volume is equal to the length of it's side^3. So if the side has length 2, the volume is 2*2*2 = 8.
To determine how many small cubes are needed to fill a right rectangular prism, you first need to calculate the volume of the prism by multiplying its length, width, and height. Then, calculate the volume of one small cube by cubing its side length. Finally, divide the volume of the prism by the volume of the small cube to find the total number of cubes required.