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There is not sufficient information to provide an answer. Do the given numbers refer to the lengths of the sides of a cuboid or some other shape, such as a parallelepiped or are they semi-axes of an ellipsoid for example? Furthermore, there are no units of measurement given.
A cubic metre is a measure of volume: it does not, in any way, specify the shape. So the shape could be a parallelepiped with sides, a nonagonal prism with eleven sides, a cylinder with three or simple a blob!
If you mean as in a rectangular cuboid then divide the product of the two given sides into the volume to find the height.
The side length is the cube root of the volume.
A triangle of vectors, in which the sides are the three vectors arranged head-tail.
A cube has six sides, regardless of how big it is. * * * * * A cubic metre need not be in the form of a cube. You can have a sphere or a hemisphere whose volume is 1 cubic metre. It can be a tetrahedron, a parallelepiped or any regular or irregula shape. Inckuding a blob!
Previous Answer: A rhombus is 2-dimensional, and therefore has no volume.The name of a 3D analogue to a rhombus is a rhomboid or parallelepiped. It's volume is: L1.(L2 x L3) Where Li are the vector lengths of the sides.
No. Only in the equilateral case. And then they will only be equal in magnitude, not direction.
The parallelogram law of vectors states that if two vectors are represented by the sides of a parallelogram, then the diagonal of the parallelogram passing through the point of intersection of the two vectors represents the resultant vector. This means that the sum of the two vectors is equivalent to the diagonal vector.
Assuming that a 3D parallelogram is a parallelepiped, it must have three sets of quartets of parallel lines.
"If two vector quantities are represented by two adjacent sides or a parallelogram then the diagonal of parallelogram will be equal to the resultant of these two vectors."
The volume of a cone is 1/3 pi times the radius squared times the height. When given the volume and height divide both sides by the height. Volume divided by height is equal to 1/3 times pi times the radius squared. Now divide both sides by 1/3 pi. This will leave you with the radius squared. Take the square root of both sides and you will get the radius.