It's impossible to say definitively. One possible answer would be 2cm x 2.5 cm x 3cm, but it could also be a cube with sides equal to the cube root of 15, or an infinite number of other possibilities. (The mass is superfluous information for this question.)
That statement is false. Volume is found by multiplying length by width by height.
what is the unit for the mass density = mass over volume volume= length*height*width check the units whether you need to convert or no and then complete it
A rectangular prism has a volume that can be found by multiplying the object's length width and height. To obtain the mass one must also know the density of the object and multiply that by the volume.
density = mass/volume mass= 425g volume=length*width*height = 1.6cm*2.5cm*8.0cm = 32 cm3 density = 425g / 32cm3 density = 13.28125 g/cm3
Height is neither mass nor volume. Height is a measure of how tall something is, mass is a measure of how much matter is in an object, volume is a measure of how much space something takes up. Sometimes height is used to find volume. For example, the volume of a box is equal to the length times the width times the height. The height may even be used to help find the mass. For example, if the density of a box is 3 grams per in2, and the width is 2 inches, the length is 2 inches, and the height is 3 inches, the mass would be volume times density, would would be (2 x 2 x 3) x 3, which would be 36 grams.
Length, width and height will give you volume. You still cannot compute the density unless you know the mass.
Length, width and height will give you volume. You still cannot compute the density unless you know the mass.
That statement is false. Volume is found by multiplying length by width by height.
Volume = Length x Width x Height, for a cube and Density = Mass / Volume.
what is the unit for the mass density = mass over volume volume= length*height*width check the units whether you need to convert or no and then complete it
Density = mass ÷ volume, which can also be written as Density = Mass ÷ (length x width x height). Height is your thickness, so isolating the variable gets you Height = Mass ÷ Length ÷ Width ÷ Density.
Indeed there is a relationship. Density is equal to the mass divided by the volume (height times width times length). So, height is equal to mass divided by (height times length times width) or H= M/(HLW)
A rectangular prism has a volume that can be found by multiplying the object's length width and height. To obtain the mass one must also know the density of the object and multiply that by the volume.
You times the length by the width by the height to find volume. To find the density do mass divided by volume.
False on two counts. A rectangular shape is 2-dimensional and so can have no mass. If it is rectangular but has length, width and height then it is a cuboid object. Then, multiplying the length width and height will give the volume, not the mass.
A point has no length, width, height, mass, area, volume, weight, shape, color, odor, or taste.
no. Volume of a cube, for example, is length x width x height. Nothing to do with mass.