a jumbo candle stick from target.
45 cm.
The same object that is 11.5 cm long
Nothing
It is: 2*3*10 = 60 cubic cm
A typical pencil is generally longer than 5 cm, while a standard book is also much larger. An AA battery is about 5 cm in length, making it the correct answer. Therefore, the object that is 5 cm long is the AA battery.
A male Portugese water dog
A common object that is 10 cm long is a standard pencil. This size is often used for writing and drawing, making it a familiar item in schools and offices. Other examples include a small ruler or a typical smartphone in a compact size.
100 cm is a measurement of lenght.... it is the direct distance between two points. cm3 is an indication of the measurement of the volume of an object - the cubic capacity. You cannot compare the two, nor can you say there are X cm3 in 100 cm. 24cm3 would be the volume of an object which was 2 cm long, by 3 cm wide, by 4 cm high.... the cubing comes from multiplying an area of cm2 - in this case we get 2cm long by 3 cm wide, giving us 6 cm2 - the square area of the object's base... cm multiplied by cm gives square cm, or cm2. When we multiply the 6cm2 by the 4 cm height we get 24cm3.... because square cm multiplied by cm gives cubic cm.
Oh, dude, like, a 28 cm long object could be, like, a ruler, a small baseball bat, or even a really long banana. But hey, who's measuring, right? Just grab a tape measure and go find something to measure, like that's the fun part.
The density of the object is 3.68 g/cm³. Density is calculated by dividing the mass of the object by its volume. In this case, 184 g ÷ 50 cm³ = 3.68 g/cm³.
To find the density of object B, calculate its volume first: 10 cm (length) * 5 cm (width) * 2 cm (height) = 100 cm^3. Then, divide the mass by the volume: 300g / 100 cm^3 = 3 g/cm^3. The density of object B is 3 g/cm^3.
That's just under four inches, about the size of an adult male's palm.