Assuming you mean a rectangular prism, you get the smallest surface area if the prism is a cube. You can calculate the required length of side to get that volume; then, based on that, the corresponding surface area.
you calculate the area of one side, then multiply it by three.
Please be specific: Are you referring to surface area, volume? the length of one side?
Calculate the area of each net individually and then add them all up together
960.
To calculate the surface area of the equilateral triangular-based prism, you need to calculate the area of the equilateral triangle and all the other sides of the prism. The total area of all the phases will give the total surface are of an equilateral triangular based prism.
Surface area = 2ab + 2bc + 2ac
The formula for calculating the volume of a hexagonal prism is to take the area of the hexagon, then multiply it by the height of the prism.
Find the area of each face separately and then add them together for the total surface area.
Formula: S = 2B + L
Assuming you mean a rectangular prism, you get the smallest surface area if the prism is a cube. You can calculate the required length of side to get that volume; then, based on that, the corresponding surface area.
area of base x h
you calculate the area of one side, then multiply it by three.
The lateral area is the perimeter of the hexagon times the height (altitude length) of the prism. Same for any other prism.
You can think of a square prism as a die, having six sides. So you need the length of one side, 's'. That side's [surface] area is s2 With six sides, the cube's surface area is simply: 6s2
Volume = Area of base x height
Please be specific: Are you referring to surface area, volume? the length of one side?