potato
The area of the carpet does not provide any information on its shape. It could be circular (the least cove base required), to a square (intermediate) to a very long thin strip (maximum).
That depends on how thin you spread it. If it's a meter thick, it only covers one square meter. If it's a centimeter thick, it covers a hundred square meters.
A square mile is an area. It can have any shape - a circle, a triangle, quadrilateral, any polygon, or just a random shape. A long thin rectangle will be fewer feet across than a squat rectangle with the same area. So how many feet across depends on the shape.
1 tile will suffice - if you cut it into 214 very thin strips. If you want a proper answer you need to know the area of the floor that you are trying to cover - not just its length!
To find the volume in cubic feet needed to cover 21,000 square feet, you would also need the height of the coverage area. The volume (cubic feet) is calculated by multiplying the area (square feet) by the height (feet). Without the height, it's not possible to determine the amount of cubic feet needed to cover 21,000 square feet.
potato
The area of the carpet does not provide any information on its shape. It could be circular (the least cove base required), to a square (intermediate) to a very long thin strip (maximum).
depends on how thick you want it. If you want a very thin layer, say 3", then one yard will cover it. a 6" layer would be 2 yards.
There are an infinite number of square feet in a cubic foot. This is because a square foot defines a 2D plane, and 2D objects have no depth. They are infinitely thin and therefore there would be an infinite number of square feet in a cubic foot. This is equal to asking how many 12 inch line segments are in a square foot, or to the next dimension, how many 12 inch line segments are in a cubic foot. Same answer, infinity.
12 A cubic foot = 12" x 12" x 12" so if a square foot 1" thick were stacked 12 times it would = a cubic foot. Although if you're talking about surface area it would be 6 to cover all sides My thoughts exactly therefore it would cover 144 sq. ft. 1" thick.
That depends on how thin you spread it. If it's a meter thick, it only covers one square meter. If it's a centimeter thick, it covers a hundred square meters.
A square mile is an area. It can have any shape - a circle, a triangle, quadrilateral, any polygon, or just a random shape. A long thin rectangle will be fewer feet across than a squat rectangle with the same area. So how many feet across depends on the shape.
1 tile will suffice - if you cut it into 214 very thin strips. If you want a proper answer you need to know the area of the floor that you are trying to cover - not just its length!
A cover slip is a thin square of glass that you put over a specimen on a microscope slide. The cover slip stops the specimen from drying out, and squishes it so that light can get though it easier
There are an infinite number of square feet in a cubic foot. This is because a square foot defines a 2D plane, and 2D objects have no depth. They are infinitely thin and therefore there would be an infinite number of square feet in a cubic foot. Square feet have dimensions L2 while cubic feet have dimensions L3 so they are not interchangeable. If volume units could be converted to area units, then you'd be able to figure out how many acres of gas your car burned last month, and you could go to the store and buy the equivalent of 2 square feet of milk.
The area is not sufficient information to determine the dimensions.First of all, there is no reason to suppose that the area is rectangular as opposed to circular or triangular or some other simple or complicated shape. Even if you assume that it is a rectangle, there are infinitely many possible answers: ranging from nearly square areas to extremely long and thin strips.