The easy way: Pour the water into a graduated container, like a graduated cylinder, and read the volume directly. The hard way: Calculate the volume of a regularly shaped container (cylindrical or rectangular). Pour the water into the container. Measure the height of the water in the container. Calculate the volume of the unfilled portion of the container. Subtract this volume from the total volume of the container.
You can tell which container has a bigger volume by using arithmetic solutions to calculate its volume.
1/3
To calculate the volume, you will need 3 dimensions, the base length and width and the container's height. If the container is a rectangular prism, the formula is L x W x H You are one dimension short.
Its volume would be 343 cubic feet.
You would need a 3rd dimension to calculate a volume.
A square has an area not a volume. Here are some equations for a cube and a square area of a square = length² volume of a cube = length³ Remember that units are very important.
You do not. As two-dimensional shapes geometric squares have area and no volume whatsoever.
The volume of a solid object such as a rock or pebble can be determined by submerging it in a liquid in a graduated cylinder or other container. The difference in the volume of the liquid is the volume of the object.
We need a THIRD figure to calculate volume
Volume=1/3 area of the base x height
You can use either your eyes, calculate the volume or practically pour liquids in a given container to find out which one has a bigger volume.