P:S: Volume=Length x Width x Height
Length=1
Width=1
Height=1
Volume=1 x 1 x 1
Volume=1 cubic meter
A cube has all sides equal length and its volume is length cubed. For c volume of 512, each side has length cube root of 512, or 8 cm
Yes, a cubic meter is a unit of volume that represents a cube with sides that are each 1 meter in length. It is commonly used to measure the volume of solids such as boxes or liquids.
A cube with each side measuring 1 meter in length will have a volume of 1 cubic meter.
The volume of a cube is calculated by cubing the length of one of its sides. In this case, the length of one side is 2 units. Therefore, the volume of a cube with sides of 2 units each is 2^3, which equals 8 cubic units.
The volume of a cube equals its side length cubed. In this case it is 3m3 which gives a volume of 27m3
Oh honey, a cubic meter is a unit of volume, not area. It's like comparing apples to oranges. You can't convert cubic meters directly to square meters. It's like asking how many cats are in a dozen eggs. Just not gonna happen, sweetie.
The volume occupied by by a cube, each of whose sides are of length 1 cm.
A metre cube of concrete is a volume of concrete which is equivalent to the volume of a cube each of whose sides are 1 metre long.
Its volume is 1 cubic meter.
It is a measure of volume. Volume is 3 dimensional, hence the cubic. The cubic part comes from the word cube. The formula for a cube is the length x length x length. So measure out 1 metre, and then a metre high. That makes a square meter. Now measure out a meter poing back from this. This makes a cube in which each dimension is a meter
A square meter is a unit of area, not length or breadth. It is the area of a square with sides that are each 1 meter in length. Therefore, a square meter has a length and breadth of 1 meter each, as it is a square with equal sides.
It depends on the shape you are attempting to compute the volume of. If you are attempting to compute the volume of a box (eight sides, each perpendicular), then it is simply length times width times height.