A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.A centimetre cubed is the volume of a cube whose edges are 1 cm each. That volume is also know as a millilitre.
Edge of the larger cube = 32 cm Volume of the larger cube = (32 cm)3 = 32768 cm3 Edge of the smaller cube = 4 cm Volume of the smaller cube = (4 cm)3 = 64 cm3 Since the smaller cubes are cut from the larger cube, volume of all of them will be equal to that of the larger cube. ∴ Total number of smaller cubes × Volume of the smaller cube = Volume of the larger cube ⇒ Total number of smaller cubes = Volume of the larger cube ÷ Volume of the smaller cube ⇒ Total number of smaller cubes = 32768 ÷ 64 = 512 Thus, 512 smaller cubes can be cut from the larger one.
With 10 cm side lengths, this cube has a volume of 1000 cm3
The volume is 1,000 cubic cm
The volume of one sugar cube is 3*3*3 = 27 cubic cm. The volume of 30 cubes is 30*27 = 810 cubic centimetres. Incidentally, these are abnormally large cubes. Most that I have seen are at most 1 cm on each side.
Yes, that is correct.
To find the volume of the 3D shape made up of identical 1 cm^3 cubes, you would need to count the total number of cubes and multiply it by the volume of one cube. For example, if there are 100 cubes, the volume would be 100 cm^3.
A cube with a side length of 5 cm has a volume of 125 cubic cm
A cube with a side length of 10 cm has a volume of 1000 cubic cm
The total volume would remain the same, no matter how you arrange them.
Volume = 1,000 cm3
The volume of this cube is 2,197 cm3