Wiki User
∙ 7y agoThe shoe box.
Wiki User
∙ 7y agoCubic feet would be the most appropriate method to measure the volume of a swimming pool because it provides a good balance between detail and ease of understanding. Cubic inches would provide too much detail, while cubic yards might not provide enough precision for a swimming pool.
Liters or cubic meters are typically used to measure the volume of water in a swimming pool.
The volume of the swimming pool in cubic feet would be 800 cubic feet: length x width x height = volume 10 feet x 10 feet x 8 feet = 800 cubic feet (10 x 10 = 100; 100 x 8 = 800)
jidoouog
The cubic volume occupied by a shipment in Cubic Meters is referred to as the shipments cbm. Note, it is cubic volume occupied, not the volume that would be displaced if placed in a water bath. An odd shaped package would occupy a much larger volume than its pure cubic volume.
1000 cubic centimeters is a measure of volume; the only "exact equivalant in volume" possible would be in another measure of volume, such as cubic inches, cubic feet, cubic meters, etc.
Yes. The units of volume would be cubic feet or cubic meters.
The cubic volume occupied by a shipment in Cubic Meters is referred to as the shipments cbm. Note, it is cubic volume occupied, not the volume that would be displaced if placed in a water bath. An odd shaped package would occupy a much larger volume than its pure cubic volume.
cubic metres
"Cubic meter" is not a width. It's a volume, an amount of space, or the holding capacity of a box, a bottle, or a tank. When the water in an official Olympic-size swimming pool is 1.36 meters deep, there is 1,700 cubic meters of water in the pool.
You would measure the swimming pools length, width and depth to determine how many cubic feet of water is in the swimming pool. Length x Width x depth = cubic feet. Then measure the mass of 1 cubic foot of water by building a box 1'x1'x1'. Once you know the mass of 1 cubic foot of water - you'll know the mass of the water in the swimming pool.
You would use the cubic meter (m^3) to express the volume of a textbook in SI units.