The volume of a stone or any irregular solid non-porous object can be determined by placing the object slowly into a container filled with water up to the very top. The water that runs over the edge of the container must be collected and measured in another container, such as a cylinder type or rectangular/square shape from which a square area can be calculated to determine the displaced volume of water.
Because it is a rectangular prism and it has volume and area also mass and perimeter
A brick, book, dresser or shelf, a toy chest or a rectangular box.
The formula to find the volume of a object or container in cc (cubic centimeters) depends on its shape. Different formulae are used for spherical, triangular, rectangular, cylindrical, etc. shapes. There is no formula for finding the volume of irregular shapes.
The shape is called a square based cuboid and its volume is 12 cubic inches.
The method for determining the volume of a solid depends on its shape. The volume of a solid object with a regular geometric shape (rectangular box, cube, cylinder, sphere) can be determined using the volume formula for the shape. Because many objects are not regularly shaped their volume cannot be determined using a volume formula. The volume of these objects can be found by water displacement. A volume of water sufficient to cover the object is placed in a graduated cylinder and the volume read. The object is added to the cylinder and the volume read again. The difference between the two volumes is the volume of the object.
Yes, the volume of an object with a regular shape can be determined by using water displacement. By measuring the amount of water displaced when the object is submerged, you can calculate the volume of the object using the principle of displacement.
Changing the shape of an object does not affect its density because density is determined by the mass and volume of an object, not its shape. As long as the mass and volume of an object remain the same, its density will remain constant regardless of its shape.
No, changing the shape or size of an object does not change its density. Density is determined by the mass of an object divided by its volume, so as long as the mass and volume remain constant, the density will stay the same.
The buoyant force acting on an object in a fluid is determined by the volume of the object displaced by the fluid. This volume is known as the displaced fluid volume, and it depends on the shape and size of the object in relation to the fluid.
It all depends upon the shape of the object. For example, the volume of a rectangular prism is lengthxwidthxheight. For an irregular shaped object, one strategy is to immerse the object into a measured amount of water, then measure what is the total volume of water plus object, and subtract the original volume of water.
I'm guessing by a rectangular object you mean cuboidal object since rectangular objects are 2-dimensional. The shape is actually unimportant though, they are all measured using the same units. Cubic metres is what you're looking for. Hope this helps!
You cannot.First, rectangular is an adjective and there is no associated noun so the question does not specify whether it is about a rectangular pyramid, a rectangular bipyramid, a rectangular prism or some other rectangular figure.Second, in order to find the weight of an object, you need the volume of the shape, the density of its material and the local force of gravity. The volume of the shape requires length and width as well as the height so the available information is hopelessly inadequate.
The volume of a stone or any irregular solid non-porous object can be determined by placing the object slowly into a container filled with water up to the very top. The water that runs over the edge of the container must be collected and measured in another container, such as a cylinder type or rectangular/square shape from which a square area can be calculated to determine the displaced volume of water.
To determine the density of a regularly shaped object by experiment, you measure the object's mass using a scale, and then measure its volume by taking accurate geometric measurements (e.g., length, width, and height). Once you have these measurements, you can calculate the density by dividing the mass by the volume. Density is expressed in units of mass per unit volume (e.g., g/cm^3).
False on two counts. A rectangular shape is 2-dimensional and so can have no mass. If it is rectangular but has length, width and height then it is a cuboid object. Then, multiplying the length width and height will give the volume, not the mass.
To find the volume of an object, you typically need to measure the object's dimensions, such as length, width, and height. You then use these measurements to calculate the volume using the appropriate formula based on the shape of the object (e.g., for a rectangular object, volume = length x width x height). A measuring tool, such as a ruler or tape measure, may also be needed.