A cube always has the same shape as a 'Dice' used to play board games, except that a cube has sharp corners and all of it's 6 faces are perfect squares. It's Length & Width and Height are all identical. When you multiply Length X Width X Height the result is called Volume. answer: Vol = LXWXH= 10x10x10= 1,000 Cubic Inches.
A ruler. Measure one of the sides, and take that measurement times itself three times, and you'll have the volume.
A cubic square has all sides the same measurement. All you haveto do is cube the length of one side and you have your volume.
For a regular object you measure the three dimensions of an object - length, width and height. After measuring each of these you then multiply them all together which leaves you with the volume of your object. Alternately, you could use a different way of calculating volume: displacement. Put x amount of water in a container with measurement markers on the sides. Then add the object. Subtract the final measurement from the original measurement and you will have the volume of the object.
It depends on the shape you are attempting to compute the volume of. If you are attempting to compute the volume of a box (eight sides, each perpendicular), then it is simply length times width times height.
A polygon that all sides and angles are the same measurement is a regular polygon.
A ruler. Measure one of the sides, and take that measurement times itself three times, and you'll have the volume.
The answer when finding volume is always a cubic measurement. The volume of a cube measuring 4 inches on all of its sides is 64 cubic inches.
53 = 125 so the sides measure 5 cm
A cubic square has all sides the same measurement. All you haveto do is cube the length of one side and you have your volume.
For a regular object you measure the three dimensions of an object - length, width and height. After measuring each of these you then multiply them all together which leaves you with the volume of your object. Alternately, you could use a different way of calculating volume: displacement. Put x amount of water in a container with measurement markers on the sides. Then add the object. Subtract the final measurement from the original measurement and you will have the volume of the object.
For a regular object you measure the three dimensions of an object - length, width and height. After measuring each of these you then multiply them all together which leaves you with the volume of your object. Alternately, you could use a different way of calculating volume: displacement. Put x amount of water in a container with measurement markers on the sides. Then add the object. Subtract the final measurement from the original measurement and you will have the volume of the object.
It depends on the shape you are attempting to compute the volume of. If you are attempting to compute the volume of a box (eight sides, each perpendicular), then it is simply length times width times height.
No, thickness and density are not the same. Thickness refers to the distance between two opposite sides of an object or material, while density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume. In other words, thickness is a linear measurement, while density is a mass/volume measurement.
A polygon that all sides and angles are the same measurement is a regular polygon.
The perimeter measurement of a pentagon is the sum of its 5 sides
In theory yes. If you have the measurements you can work out the volume. Then with the volume you can multiply it by the density to give you weight. But you'll also need to know the density of the matterial so if a measurement is all you got then no.
Cubing is the process of raising a number to the power of 3, which is equivalent to multiplying the number by itself twice. In terms of volume, cubing a length measurement represents the volume of a cube with sides of that length. The formula for the volume of a cube is V = side length^3.