To find the density you need the mass and volume and then, density = mass/volume.
Given a ruler, you can easily measure an edge of the cube. If that is x units, then the volume is x3 cubic units.
However, it is not clear how you find a mass with just a balance. You need some standard weights, but these do not appear to be provided. You are stuck and cannot answer the question.
Scales to measure its mass and a ruler to measure the length of the cube's side.
You would need a balance to measure its mass. You would need a ruler to measure the length of its sides. Then you would need to calculate volume. Then divide the mass by the volume to get density.
no it is not 4 is a perfect cube
No, 148 is not a perfect cube.
No, 2 is neither a perfect square nor a perfect cube.
Scales to measure its mass and a ruler to measure the length of the cube's side.
You would need a balance to measure its mass. You would need a ruler to measure the length of its sides. Then you would need to calculate volume. Then divide the mass by the volume to get density.
The simplest procedure is find the mass of the cube using a simple balance. Preciously measure the size hence volume of the cube. Then Density=Mass/Volume and unit is gm/cc
no it is not 4 is a perfect cube
If by cube you mean perfect cube (a cube of an integer), then no, and the nearest perfect cube is 81.
No, 148 is not a perfect cube.
The density of a cube is calculated by dividing its mass by its volume. The formula to calculate density is: Density = Mass/Volume. The density of a cube will depend on the material it is made of.
No, 2 is neither a perfect square nor a perfect cube.
To find the density of the cube material, divide the mass of the cube by its volume. You would first need to know the volume of the cube to calculate its density accurately. If the volume of the cube is 8cm³, then the density would be 96g/8cm³ = 12g/cm³.
The relative density of a plastic cube is the ratio of the density of the plastic cube to the density of water. To calculate it, you would divide the density of the plastic cube by the density of water (usually 1 g/cm^3). If the relative density is less than 1, the cube will float in water, and if it's greater than 1, the cube will sink.
Because they are square/cube of an integer.
It is both because 1,000,000 is a perfect cube and a perfect square number