Measure the depth and width using the same units. Divide the depth measurement by the width measurement.
Math
Area is a plane or surface measurement. Depth is not required. Multiply the length by the width.
You cannot since a rectangle is a two-dimensional figure. It has no depth, no volume, no mass.
Use a tape measure or ruler. ;)
Measure the depth using a metric ruler!
The depth of his furrowed brow was rather disconcerting. You will find the Yeti crab at a deeper depth than this.
To find the depth in a hydrostatic pressure equation, you can use the formula: pressure = density of fluid x gravitational acceleration x depth of fluid. Rearrange the equation to solve for depth: depth = pressure / (density of fluid x gravitational acceleration).
Measure the depth and width using the same units. Divide the depth measurement by the width measurement.
To find the difference between the initial and final depth of water is to subtract the final depth by the initial depth. The initial depth of what is what the water depth starts at and the final depth is the depth of the water once it is finished filling up.
You use Sonar
Brady you cant find the answer can you.
By diving lol
Math
One can find information about depth gauges online. However, for tire depth gauges the best place would be the local automotive store, and for the chainsaw depth gauge the best place to go is to a home improvement store.
=First find the length, height, depth, and hyper depth of your shape.==Then multiply: length x height x depth x hyper depth, this will give you the hypervolume of the shape.=
depth equals volume divided by length times width