There are 6 faces each 10 x 10 giving 600 square inches.
Each square foot is 144 square inches.
So answer: 600/144 = 4 24/144 = 4 1/6 = 4.16666666666666 square feet.
square - cube as circle - sphere
A square because a cube has 6 of them
A cube has 6 square faces. A cube also has 8 vertices and 12 edges. It may also be called a regular hexahedron.
It depends if you are talking about a cube or just a square. A cube has 6 faces and a square has only 4.
A cube has six equal square faces.
To cover all 6 faces of a cube with 512 cubic centimeters, you would need at least 3 square feet of paper. Each face of the cube would require a square piece of paper with a side length equal to the square root of the cube's volume, which in this case is the cube root of 512 or 8.
5x5x6=150 If the cube has 5 inch long sides then each side has an area of 5 inches x 5 inches which equals 25 sqare inches. The cube has 6 sides so the total area of paper needed to cover it is 25 square inches x 6, which is 150 square inches of paper.
No. The square is all on one flat surface, like a piece of paper, but a cube has height off of the paper. When you set the cube down on the piece of paper, the place where it touches the paper is a square, but there's a lot more to it than that.
Square
To make a cube, start by drawing a square on a piece of paper for the base. Then, draw three vertical lines from each corner of the square, the same height. Connect the tops of these vertical lines with another square, forming the top of the cube. Finally, erase any overlapping lines to clarify the shape, and you have your cube.
As 0.5/sq in has no units ($, lbs of gold, bars of latinum) the answer cannot be calculated. It will take 27 of them though.
a square because a square is in a cube!!!
Square=2 Cube=3
square it and cube it
a cube
To draw a cube of edge 5 cm on graph paper, start by drawing a square with each side measuring 5 cm. This will represent one face of the cube. Next, from each corner of the square, draw lines at a 45-degree angle, each measuring 5 cm to represent the depth of the cube. Finally, connect the endpoints of these lines to form the opposite face, completing the 3D illusion of the cube.
A cube has 6 square faces.