The equation to find the volume of a rectangular object is (a) volume equals length times width times height.
The volume would increase by a factor of 23 = 8
volume is how much space is in an object (an object with more volume would be bigger) weight is how heavy an object feels due to gravity (an object with more weight would be harder to lift) density is how much matter is in an amount of space (an object with more density would weigh as much as an object with less density but in a smaller space/volume)
What would be the density of an object that has a volume of 25 cm3 and 5 grams?
It's the mass divided by its volume. The volume of a rectangular prism is length times width times height. So it would be 100 grams divided by the volume, and that volume = (L*W*H)
To find the density of a rectangular solid object, you would calculate the mass of the object by multiplying its volume by its density. For an irregular solid object, you would typically measure its mass using a balance and its volume using displacement of water, then divide the mass by the volume to find the density. The main difference lies in how you determine the volume of the object, with rectangular solids having a straightforward formula for volume calculation compared to irregular shapes which require more complex methods.
If you know the density of the rectangular body you can find the volume and the plug it into this equation mass= (density)*(volume) If you have the means you can just submerge the body completely in water and find the volume of the water displaced that will be the mass as waters density is 1 g/cm^3
The volume of a rectangular prism would double if you double the height.
The same as for any other three dimensional rectangular object: Length X Width X Depth.
Technically the answer is 0, as a rectangle is a 2-dimensional object that has no volume. However I expect that you mean a rectangular prism, so the volume of that would go up by a factor of 8 (2 to the power of 3).
The equation to find the volume of a rectangular object is (a) volume equals length times width times height.
To establish the density of a solid rectangular shaped object, you would first measure its mass using a scale. Then, measure its dimensions (length, width, and height) with a ruler to calculate its volume. Finally, divide the mass by the volume to determine the density, which is expressed in units such as grams per cubic centimeter.
To calculate the volume of a box-shaped object, you would multiply the length, width, and height of the box together (V = l x w x h). This formula works because the volume of a rectangular prism is calculated by multiplying its three dimensions.
The volume would increase by a factor of 23 = 8
Base x Height x Width = Volume of any rectangular prism.
Volume of a rectangular block is: length*width*height. Use consistent units.
No, the volume of an object does not change when its size changes. The volume is a fixed measure of the amount of space that the object occupies and is calculated using specific dimensions. Changing the size of the object would involve altering these dimensions but would not impact the volume.