The volume of a prism cannot be 512 centimetres because a volume is a measure in 3-dimensional space whereas a centimetre is only a 1-dimensional measure.
Furthermore, even if the measurement units were correct, there is insufficient information to provide an answer. For example, the prism could be
1 cm x 1 cm x 512 cm
or
10 cm x 10 cm x 5.12 cm
or any one of infinitely many other options.
Volume = Length *Breadth*Height
You can't tell the dimensions of a rectangle from its area, or the dimensions of a prism from its volume.
7.9
Volume of a rectangular prism= LengthXWidthXHeight Area of a Rectangle= LengthXWidth Area of a Trapezoid= (Bottom+Top)/2)XHeight
Volume divided by Height.
Volume = Length *Breadth*Height
A rectangular prism that is 5 centimeters wide, 10 centimeters long and 4 centimeters high has a volume of 200cm3
You can't tell the dimensions of a rectangle from its area, or the dimensions of a prism from its volume.
7.9
Volume of a rectangular prism= LengthXWidthXHeight Area of a Rectangle= LengthXWidth Area of a Trapezoid= (Bottom+Top)/2)XHeight
Volume divided by Height.
The volume of any rectangular prism is its side lengths multiplied together. Here, 11*24*13.2=348.38 cubic centimeters.
Volume of a rectangular prism = lenght*width*height. So 8 * 3 * 10 = 240 cm3
A rectangle is a two-dimensional shape, and therefore has no volume. A rectanular prism (a box) has a volume of length x width x height.
the horizontal cross-sections of the prisms at the same height must have the same area. (APEX)
volume of a rectangular prism = length * width * height
volume/height=base area.