It's volume is 6 cubic centimetres, but you need it's mass if you want to find it's density. It's density in grams per cubic centimetre would be it's total mass divided by six.
The density of an object depends on its mass and volume. There is some confusingly presented information about the volume but absolutely no information on the mass. It is, therefore, impossible to provide a sensible answer.
7" x 6" x 5" = 210 cubic inches
For a cuboid, Volume = Length * Width * Height = 0.25*6.1*4.9 = 7.4725 m3
That depends on the exact shape of the figure. If it is a rectangular block, just multiply the three numbers.
A rectangular prism that is 6 cm long, 2 cm wide and 5 cm high has a volume of 60cm3
224 m to the 3rd power
The density of an object depends on its mass and volume. There is some confusingly presented information about the volume but absolutely no information on the mass. It is, therefore, impossible to provide a sensible answer.
It is the cube which has a volume of 64 cubic meters whereas the rectangular solid has a volume of 32 cubic meters
1.3g/mL
It is: 0.25*6.1*4.9 = 7.4725 cubic m
7" x 6" x 5" = 210 cubic inches
Just multiply the three dimensions together10in x 4in x 7in = 280in3
Assuming that the solid is a cuboid (not an ellipsoid, for example), its volume is 10*1*5 = 50 cm3. Therefore its density = mass/volume = 500/50 = 10 grams per cm3
For a cuboid, Volume = Length * Width * Height = 0.25*6.1*4.9 = 7.4725 m3
That depends on the exact shape of the figure. If it is a rectangular block, just multiply the three numbers.
The density of a material is defined as its mass per unit volume, density = m/v (mass/volume) One unit for this is grams/cm3. The weight is 12 g, and the volume is: v = 3 cm x 2 cm x 1 cm = 6 cm3 plugging in: density = m/v = 12 g/6cm3 = 2 g/cm3
No shape can have a density of 7.2 g since grams are not unit in which density is measured.If the density were 7.2 grams per cubic centimetre, then the with would be approx 0.000476 cm = 4.76 micrometres.