Nothing
A cubic unit is a volume eg. m³ A square unit is an area eg. m²
One cubic unit
Yes. 'cc' is the abbreviation for "cubic centimeter", often written as 'cm3'. This is the unit of volume in the CGS system. It's the volume of a cube measuring 1 centimeter on its side.
Well, first of all, that's no cube. All three dimensions of a cube are the same number. If they're not, then it's not a cube. -- The volume of that thing is (1 x 1 x 6) = 6 cubic units. -- Its surface area is [ 2 x (1 x 1) + 4 x (1 x 6) ] = (2 + 24) = 26 square units. -- The ratio of surface area to volume is 26 square units/6 cubic units = 41/3 per unit. -- For a cube, the ratio is always 6 per unit.
Determining the volume is the situation that describes a cubic unit.
A centimeter is a unit of length, a cubic centimeter is a unit of volume.
A cubic unit is a volume eg. m³ A square unit is an area eg. m²
One cubic unit
Cubic centimeter and centimeter cube equal the same thing. The cubic volume of any substance is 1 unit x 1 unit x 1 unit.
A unit can be a measure of length. It is one-dimensional. A squared unit can be a measure of area. It is two-dimensional. A cubic unit can be a measure of volume. It is three-dimensional.
There is no such unit as a 'cubic milliliter'.A cube with an edge of 7 length units has a volume of 343 of the same unit cubed.
The edge of a cube that has a volume 64 cubic units is: 4 units.
A 3.5 unit cube has a volume of 42.875 cubic units.
Cubic inches or cubic meters. Take any unit of length and cube it and that is a unit for volume
cubic centimeter
The units for volume are generally the cube of some unit of length - for instance, cubic meters, cubic kilometers, cubic light-years, cubic femtometers, etc.However, there are also units of volume that are not derived from the cube of a length - for example, the gallon, the fluid ounce, or tablespoons.
A cubic unit is a measure of volume. It is equal to the volume of a cube, which is 1 unit tall, 1 unit wide and 1 unit long. If you are in abstract math then it's just called cubic units. In the real world, you can have cubic centimeters, cubic feet, cubic inches, to represent volume.