Volume does not, surface area does.
The volume of a cube that has a surface area of 343 is 432.2
Yes Volume: Is the amount it takes to build it. Surface Area: Is how much is on the surface.
Surface area is 96cm2 Volume is 64cm3
0.6 m-1 is the ratio of surface area to volume for a sphere.
Volume of a solid helps us understand the amount of space it occupy's internally. Surface area of a solid helps us know what is the area of a given face/faces of a solid.
No solid figure has a surface area equal to its volume. That would not be possible as the units of measure are different.
the sphere has the smallest surface area for any given volume.
The change in the surface area depends on the shape. The volume will double.
It's not true. As with all solid figures, polyhedra have volume and surface area.
Solid objects exist in real life. Each one of them has a surface area as well as a volume.
In my daily life, I have no use for the surface area and or volume of a cube. None whatsoever.
No, the volume of a solid does not necessarily expand when its area expands. The volume of a solid is determined by its three-dimensional space, which is typically not directly related to changes in its surface area. The expansion of the area of a solid does not always result in an expansion of its volume.
Provided the shape remains similar, the surface varies as the 2/3 power of the volume. Or, to put it another way, the cube root of the volume varies directly as the square root of the surface area. Or, the square of the volume is in direct proportion to the cube of the area.
the volume would get bigger, and the solid itself would just get bigger.
To obtain the ratio of surface area to volume, divide the surface area by the volume.
Volume is how much an object can store - like how much can you put inside a box. Surface area is the sum of the area of an objects surfaces - such as if you have a box, find the area of one side. Then you just multiply it by 6 (because a box have 6 faces) to get the total area of an object's surface.