Either: 1) Find the radius of each marble and thus their volume through V = 4/3 x pi x r^3 and then add the volumes up. or 2) Put all the marbles in a measuring jug and fill it up to the top. Pour the water into a separate container and empty the marbles out of the jug. Pour the water back into the jug. Thus: Volume of water with marbles - volume of water without the marbles = volume of marbles
If the marbles are identical, the volume is the same. If you want, you can use different units and it looks like the volume is different.
60 marbles.. each point of the six pointed star has 10
A litre is a region of space (volume or capacity). It has nothing to do with weight.
He will have 13 blue marbles and 10 green marbles.
Since density is mass per unit volume, the density is the same.
Six marbles
Either: 1) Find the radius of each marble and thus their volume through V = 4/3 x pi x r^3 and then add the volumes up. or 2) Put all the marbles in a measuring jug and fill it up to the top. Pour the water into a separate container and empty the marbles out of the jug. Pour the water back into the jug. Thus: Volume of water with marbles - volume of water without the marbles = volume of marbles
If the marbles are identical, the volume is the same. If you want, you can use different units and it looks like the volume is different.
6
What is the volume of 16 one rupees coins.... Ml
Get a measuring jug that will hold the marbles easily. Half fill the measuring jug with water. Note the volume reading on the measuring Jug scale (measurement A). Add the marbles. Note the new water level reading on the measuring jug scale (measurement B).Subtract measurement A from measurement B, the answer is the volume of the marbles.
4:10 or 2:5
60 marbles.. each point of the six pointed star has 10
It is 1248/57120 = 13/595 = 0.0218 approx.
0. They don't make any sounds. :P
There were only six marbles in Ryan's garden.