The volume of a jar in millimetres does not make any sense because a millimetre is a measure of length, not volume.
The volume of a sphere that has a radius of 10 millimeters is: 4,189 mm3
Volume = 1/3*pi*42*9 = 150.7964474 cubic millimeters
The volume of this cone is about 2,412.7 mm3
Nothing. A millimetre is a measure of length, not of volume.
It is impossible to calculate the volume of a jar given only these two dimensions. If the volume can be found you then need to know the density of whatever it is you are trying to fill it with.
Calculate the volume of one sweet. Calculate the volume of the jar and then divide the volume of the jar by the volume of a sweet.
There is no metric unit of capacity or volume that is equal to 1000 millimeters. This is because millimeters is length, and it has no relevance to capacity and/or volume.
A jar has a fixed volume.
The volume is 12,383,000 mm3
The volume of a sphere that has a radius of 10 millimeters is: 4,189 mm3
There are no millimeters in volume. That is ameasure of length.
The volume of this cone is about 2,412.7 mm3
Volume = 1/3*pi*42*9 = 150.7964474 cubic millimeters
You don't. Millimeters is a length, liters is a volume.
The numerical value would depend on the volume of the jar
1000 cubic millimeters = 1 cubic centimeter 16000 cubic millimeters = 16 cubic centimeters 1 cm = 10 mm 16cm = 160 mm Millimeters are distance. Cubic centimeters is volume. You can convert volume to volume and length to length, but not length to volume nor volume to length. I gave you the conversions I could...
Millimeters