2*15*10 = 300 cubic cm
The depth would have to have a value of 1. For example, a slab 60" long by 24" wide by 1" deep would have the same surface area as volume. Examples: Area = LxW (60x24=1440 sq inches). Volume = LXWXD (60x24x1=1440 cubic inches). In this case, the volume has the same value as the surface area
If you have the volume for the box you could figure it out. The formula for the volume of a box is V=LWH where V=volume, W=width, L=length, and H=height/depth. Divide both sides by LW (V/LW=LWH/LW) You end up with V/LW=H. Plug in the numbers and you get your answer.
The volume of a cube is found by multiplying the height x width x depth. example- a cube that is 3 feet high, 3 feet wide, and 3 feet deep is 3 x 3 x 3... 3 x 3=9... 9 x 3= 27. The volume of the 3' cube is 27 cubic feet.
136 square feet * 3 feet = 15.11... cubic yards.
The volume of a cylinder is V=PI*r2*h The radius of the cylinder is 3 cm and the height would be 1cm So V = PI*(3cm)2*(1cm) V is approx. 28.3 cm3
2 x 20 x 10 =400 cubic centimetres.
There are 60,000 m3 in a 15cm deep plot with an area of 40 hectares.
It is: 2*20*10 = 400 cubic cm
28.2 cube '
It depends on how deep you want the bark to be, the recommended depth is 2 - 4 inches (5 - 10cm) thus at 10cm deep you'd need 201m3 to cover 2006m2
The question asks for the volume of water but provides only two linear measures. There is not enough information.
Respiratory volume is defined as how much air a person can hold in their lungs. Respiratory volume can be measured by having the person take a deep breath, and blow out into a device that measures air capacity.
285.6 liters. A liter is 10cm x 10cm x 10cm. So all you have to do is multiply 14 x 6 x 3.4 to get the number of liters.
11.5 inches
The International Space Station measures 51m long, 109m wide, and 20m deep, and has an enclosed volume of just over 900 cubic metres.
3 in deep x 24 in wide x 36.5 in high is a measure of volume NOT of area. A square footage is a measure of area, not volume. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
The volume of a 300mm diameter by 600mm deep cylinder is: 42,412,000 mm3