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Volume of a Rectangular Prism The volume of a rectangular prism can be found by the formula: volume=length*width*height
-- Measure the length, width, and height of the prism. -- Multiply the three numbers. The result is the volume of the prism.
You can't tell the dimensions of a rectangle from its area, or the dimensions of a prism from its volume.
Volume of any prism = cross-section area times length
No.
Volume of a Rectangular Prism The volume of a rectangular prism can be found by the formula: volume=length*width*height
To get the volume of a rectangular prism, you multiply the length, height, and depth/width measurements. For example: length= 5 cm width/depth= 2 cm height= 3 cm 5cm * 2 cm * 3 cm = 30 cm3 Don't forget units like cm3 or in3 or the like!
Volume of rectangular prism = area of base x height
To find the volume on a rectangular prism, the equaton is: length*width*height
-- Measure the length, width, and height of the prism. -- Multiply the three numbers. The result is the volume of the prism.
You can't tell the dimensions of a rectangle from its area, or the dimensions of a prism from its volume.
Volume of any prism = cross-section area times length
base times height
You divide its mass by its volume.
No.
Just knowing the volume in centimeters cubed of a rectangular prism would not allow you to find the dimensions.
The answer will depend on what is known about the rectangular prism. If you have no measurements then the only way to obtain the height is to measure it - either directly or indirectly. If you know three out of its length, breadth, volume and total surface area it is possible to use the formulae connecting them to calculate the height. Instead of the volume, you could have the mass and knowledge of the substance that a solid prism is made out of. In each case, a different formula is required.