1 litre is 1000 cubic centimetres. Cube root of 1000 is 10, so each side of your cube is 10cm x 10cm. (I am Australian, the spelling for Litre and centimetres is correct)
10 centimetres.
The length of the sides of the cube are 8 inches.
The volume of a cube is determined by cubing the length of one edge, so the cube root of the volume will give you the length of an edge. (In a cube, all of the edges are the same length)
The cube's edge length is 1 decimeter.
1 litre would be a cube with each edge of length 1 decimetre = 10 centimetres. If you are only able to visualise imperial measures, that is a cube with approx 4 inch edges.
The volume of a cube with a side length of 1 decimetre is one litre.
It is represented by the volume of a cube whose sides are 1 decimetre.
1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeters. The cube root of 1000 is 10.
That is the volume of a cube with a side length of 1 decimeter.
10 centimetres.
10 centimetres.
A cube with a side length of 10cm has a volume of 1000cm3 which equates to 1 Liter.
A cube of 1 decimetre length, 1 decimetre width, and 1 decimetre height is filled exactly by 1 litre. If you have 1 litre of pure water, then this will weigh exactly 1 kilogram.
The characteristic length of a cube refers to the length of a side of a cube. Since the length of all the sides of a cube are the same, the characteristic length refers to all sides.
It depends on what cube you are talking about. If you mean a cube of sugar then about about 4x10^-6 metric tons. A cubic metre of water is close enough to 1 metric ton. The cube from the movie 'The Cube', that angry robot cube from Star Trek or a Rubik's cube are all other cube examples that would have varying weights.
The characteristic length of a cube refers to the length of a side of a cube. Since the length of all the sides of a cube are the same, the characteristic length refers to all sides.
The liter is a unit of volume, but it is only tolerated, it is not part of SI. The basic unit of volume in SI is the metric cube (m3). 1 m3 = 1 000 L