I presume that the box is more than "square", that it is in fact a cube - 1 metre along all sides.
The volume of such a box is 1 cubic metre.
The area of the base of such a box is 1 square metre. If the height is anything other than 1 metre, multiply the height in metres by 1 and you will get the volume in cubic metres.
The easiest way to visualise 1 square metre is to picture a square with a side length of 1 metre. Then the area of this square is 1 square meter.
However, you can then change the shape to a rectangle and the area will still be 1 square metre if the height is increased by the the same factor that the width is reduced.
so, we have : 1m x 1m = 1sq m : 2m x ½m = 1 sq m : 3m x ⅓m = 1 sq m.......and so on.
Water has a density of 1 gram per cubic centimeter. There are 1,000,000 cubic centimeters in a cubic meter, so 1 cubic meter has a mass of 1000 kilograms.
Assuming the 10mm bars are arranged in a perfect square pattern, the number of bars at 10mm spacing in 1 square meter would be 1000 bars. This is calculated by dividing the total area (1000 square centimeters) by the area taken up by each bar (1 square centimeter).
1000 liters means one million cubic centimeters (106 cc) so if you had a perfect cube with all sides 100 cm (ie 1 meter) it would be 1000 liters or 1 cubic meter. This is obvious because 1 cubic meter of water weighs one tonne or 1000 kg. If you had a drum shaped tank with a base of diameter 1 meter, the base area would be 0.7855 sq meters, so to get a volume of 1 cubic meter it would have to be 1.273 meters high. please show me an example
Premixed concrete and cement is usually ordered in quantities referred to as yards. A yard is basically a cubic yard of volume, a three dimensional square box that is 3' x 3' x 3', or 27 square feet. If an area to be poured requires the coverage of 27 square feet with a thickness of 4", then the amount of concrete required would be 1/3 yard.
You would have to find the volume of the box in cm3 and then change units in to mL's. If the box is not full of the liquid , measure the volume of the box at where the liquid levels off.
There is no answer to this, a "square" (I assume a square meter) is a measure of area (2-dimensions), whereas a cubic meter is a measure of volume (3-dimensions).E.g.Suppose a piece of wood has a length and width of 1 meter each. This makes the wood 1 square meter in size.If you take 6 of these pieces of wood and build a box, the box will have length, width, and height of 1 meter (i.e. a cube). The box has a volume of 1 cubic meter.
A cubic meter is a unit of volume, representing the volume of a cube with sides that are each 1 meter in length. A square meter, on the other hand, is a unit of area, representing the area of a square with sides that are each 1 meter in length. Since volume and area are different concepts, it is not possible to directly convert cubic meters to square meters.
1 cubic meter...P:S: Volume=Length x Width x HeightLength=1Width=1Height=1Volume=1 x 1 x 1Volume=1 cubic meter
1*2.5*1.5=3.75m^3
To calculate the number of square meters in a cubic meter when a square meter is 100 mm thick, you first need to convert the thickness to meters. Since 1 meter is equal to 1000 mm, 100 mm is equal to 0.1 meters. To find the number of square meters in a cubic meter, you divide 1 cubic meter by the thickness in meters. Therefore, there are 10 square meters in a cubic meter when a square meter is 100 mm thick.
1 newton meter square is equal to 10^4 centimeter cube.
A square 1 meter long and 1 meter wide is 1 square meter. 1 square meter equals 1.19599 square yards 1 square meter equals 10.76391 square feet
The question is a lot like asking "How much is 30 minutes in length ?" 1 square meter is a measurement of area. It has zero volume.
m3 is the unit of volume, where as square foot is of area. There is no relation.
1 square meter. 2 * 1 * .5 = 1
Talk to your teacher about volume and area...."square" is a planar measure (two dimensions)"cube" is a volume dimension (three dimensions)one cannot be converted into the other.The SURFACE area of a one meter cube is 6 square metersCubic means volume and square means area. A tank that measures 1 meter wide by 1 meter long by 1 meter tall has a volume of 1 cubic meter and the area of its basis ( 1 meter wide by 1 meter long) equals 1 square meter.This cannot be answered as they are different units. It's like asking how many points are there in a straight line.None- these are measurements of different dimensions. Your question is almost like asking how many inches are a cup and of what color.A cube of one cubic meter volume has a surface area of 6 square metersA rectangular block of one cubic meter volume having dimensions 0,5 * 0,5 * 4 meters has a surface area of 8,5square metersA sphere with a volume of one cubic meter has a surface area of about 4,836 square meters (this is the shape with the smallest area per volume - that is why bubbles and planets and stars are spherical)The dimensions that are used to calculate area (m2) are only enough to provide us with a 2D image of the object. To calculate volume (m3), a 3D image (i.e. its depth) is a necessary component. Therefore, 1 m2 cannot be equal to any form of m3.
It is a very confused measure of a volume that has a cross section of 1 square foot and a depth (or height) of 1 metre.