Volume of prism: 100 times 12 = 1200 cubic units
A cone with a base area of 100 and a height of six has a volume of 200 units3
It's the mass divided by its volume. The volume of a rectangular prism is length times width times height. So it would be 100 grams divided by the volume, and that volume = (L*W*H)
Volume of a pyramid = 1/3*base area*height Volume = 250,000 cubic mm
Volume of pyramid: 1/3*100*6 = 200 cubic units
Volume of pyramid: 1/3*100*6 = 200 cubic units
100*25 = 2,500 cubic inches
Volume = area x height volume is 100 cm cubed height = volume/area = 100/50 = 2 cm
A cone with a base area of 100 and a height of six has a volume of 200 units3
It's the mass divided by its volume. The volume of a rectangular prism is length times width times height. So it would be 100 grams divided by the volume, and that volume = (L*W*H)
Volume of a pyramid = 1/3*base area*height Volume = 250,000 cubic mm
Volume of pyramid: 1/3*100*6 = 200 cubic units
Volume of pyramid: 1/3*100*6 = 200 cubic units
I assume the volume is 100 cubic cm and NOT 100 cm. The volume of a cylinder is cross-sectional area * height 100 = cross sectional area * 30 so that the area of the bottom, or cross section, is 100/30 = 3.333... sq cm
height of triangle - 2cmbase of triangle - 10cmlength of prism - 10cmRemember, this is just one example I made up off the top of my head. There are plenty of others.
A surface area and a volume are qualitatively different. If for some body the surface area and the volume are numerically equal in one unit of measurement, then in another unit of measurement they won't be the same. For example, a cube of 6 m x 6 m x 6 m cube has a a volume of 216 cubic meters, and an area of 216 square meters, but if you calculate volume and surface area in cubic centimeters, the volume is a number that is 100 times greater.
1200 by 100 will only give you an area, you need 3 values (length, width, height) to get a volume
100