You can't tell the dimensions of a rectangle from its area, or the dimensions of a prism from its volume.
area is 2, volume is 3
Volume has three dimensions - width, height and depth.
For a box, the dimensions the define a volume would be:Height, Width, and DepthFor a cylinder, the dimensions that define a volume would be:Height and Diameter
The volume doesn't tell the dimensions. It doesn't even tell the shape.
Volume always has three dimensions. Area always has two dimensions. Length always has one dimension. Location has no dimensions.
Because volume has three dimensions: A line has one dimension: length An area has two dimensions: length and width Volume has three dimensions: length, width and depth.
You can't tell the dimensions from the volume. There are an infinite number of different sets of dimensions that all have the same volume.
The volume of an object has three dimensions and when all three dimensions are multiplied together the product is called the volume which is measured in cubic units.
Volume is proportional to the cube of the linear dimensions.Double the dimensions ===> volume is multiplied by (2)3 = 8 .
Yes, each sample of a substance occupies space due to its physical dimensions and the volume it occupies in a container. The amount of space a sample occupies is known as its volume.
There's no such thing as a "cubic litre". The litre is already a unit that has three dimensions and describes a volume of space. A cubic litre would have nine dimensions, and no physical significance.