The capacity or volume.
Which refers to the number of cubic units inside a space figure?
The same amount of units cubed as there is space to be filled. Say there is a cube with all of the side lengths being x. To calculate volume, the formula is length times width times height, so x times x times x. That equals x cubed. To fill the space, you need x cubed units.
Since "amount of matter" is measured as an object's mass and "a given space" is measured as volume, the amount of matter in an a given space should equal mass/volume. Mass divided by volume is an object's density. Acceptable units of density include: grams/liters, kilograms/cubic meters, slugs/cubic inch, slugs/cubic foot, and many others.
That depends on the 3rd dimension which has not been given
The capacity or volume.
The answer depends on how large the given space is!
Which refers to the number of cubic units inside a space figure?
the distance around a figure is called
That's the "volume" of the space.
The number of cubic units needed to fill the space occupied by a solid is called its volume. This volume measurement indicates how much space the solid takes up and can be calculated using the appropriate formula based on the shape of the solid (e.g., length x width x height for a rectangular prism).
Cubic units refers to the dimension used to measure the volume of a given substance. One cubic unit refers to the amount of space that a given unit cube occupies.
382 cubic inches of it.
You will need 3.6 cubic yards.
The same amount of units cubed as there is space to be filled. Say there is a cube with all of the side lengths being x. To calculate volume, the formula is length times width times height, so x times x times x. That equals x cubed. To fill the space, you need x cubed units.
Since "amount of matter" is measured as an object's mass and "a given space" is measured as volume, the amount of matter in an a given space should equal mass/volume. Mass divided by volume is an object's density. Acceptable units of density include: grams/liters, kilograms/cubic meters, slugs/cubic inch, slugs/cubic foot, and many others.
That depends on the 3rd dimension which has not been given