If it's a cube, then all the sides are equal. So 3X3X3 = 27 cubic feet in volume.
Sure. The volume is 125 cubic meters.
If it is a cube, all sides must be identical.
3 feet tall and 3.16cm round
Volume = 2.792 cubic feet.
The Statue of Liberty is 151 feet tall from her base to her torch. If you measure from the foundation she stands 305 feet tall. Her volume is unknown.
To find the volume of a cube, or a rectangular shaped solid, just multiply together the lengths of each dimension. In other words: Volume = length X width X height By definition a cube has all three equal. So, for example, if a cube is 5 cm x 5 cm x 5 cm, then its volume is: 5 X 5 X 5 = 125 cm3 (Note: "cm3" is read "cubic centimeter") A rectangular solid might not have all equal dimensions. So, if you had a rectangle that measured 1 foot tall, 3 feet long, and 0.5 feet wide, the volume is: 1 X 3 X 0.5 = 1.5 ft3 (Note: "ft3" is read "cubic foot" or "cubic feet")
Information about the volume of an object provides no information on its shape: it could be a sphere, ellipsoid, cube, cuboid or even a blob. Even if, on some tenuous basis, you assume that it is cuboid, it could be tall and thin or short and squat.
Centimeters are a measurement of distance, not volume. However, if you were to make a cube that was 1cm long, 1cm tall and 1 cm wide that cube would have a volume of one cubic centimeter (1cm^3) which is equal to one milliliter (1mL)
Volume = 3ft x 3ft x 9ft = 81 cubic feet.
"40*40*40 = 64000". This answer only applies if the asker is looking for the exact volume of a container that is actually 40 feet in height, length, and width.If, in fact, you are searching for the volume of a 40 Foot High Cube Shipping Container as I was, the correct interior volume of this device is: 2,694 ft3 / 76.3 m3.
density of 1.5 cm tall and mass of 1.0 g of a cube of a cork=mass/volume of cube== 1.0/(1.5*1.5*1.5)gm/cm3=.2963gm/cm3
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