Edge lengths = 7 cm
Diagonal = 12.12 cm
Volume = 343 cm3
No, volume is cubed. Area is squared, for example, 2cm^2 Volume would be in cubic centimeters, meters, etc.
The volume is cubed and the surface area is squared.
384 cubic centimeters.
10.64 cm squared
the rectangular prism has a volume of 126 cubic centimeters, what is the height
This question cannot be answered in a sensible way. A surface area has dimensions [L2]. The volume has dimensions [L3]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions without additional information.
No, volume is cubed. Area is squared, for example, 2cm^2 Volume would be in cubic centimeters, meters, etc.
The volume is cubed and the surface area is squared.
384 cubic centimeters.
Area of cylinder base = pi x Radius squared (πr2) Radius is in centimeters (cm) Area is in centimeters squared (cm2) ---- Volume = Area x Height Area is in centimeters squared (cm2) Height is in centimeters (cm) Volume is in centimeters cubed (cm3) ---- Mass = Volume x Density Density is in grams centimeter cubed (g/cm3) Volume is in centimeters cubed (cm3) Mass is in grams (g)
10.64 cm squared
12 cm
The question, as stated, cannot be answered sensibly. A squared centimetre is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A millilitre is a measure of volume, with dimensions [L3]. The two measure different things and basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
the rectangular prism has a volume of 126 cubic centimeters, what is the height
Cm squared is not a volume. Please decide whether you meant cubic centimeters, or whether you were actually referring to its surface area, and post another question.
The volume cannot be calculated from an area measurement (42 cm squared) because volume is a measure of cubic units (cm^3). To calculate volume, you would need a third dimension such as height or depth.
You can't convert that. Square centimeters is a unit of AREA (2 dimensions), liter is a unit of VOLUME (3 dimensions).