The volume of a cube is found by length x width x depth. For instance, a cube measuring 4cm x 4cm x 4cm = 64 cubic centimetres
In a cube the length width and height are all the same so the volume of a cube is s3 where s is the length of a side. In this case, that is (4 cm)3 = 64 cm3
96 cm.^2
1) It definitely isn't a cube. 2) The volume of the so called "cube" is 64cm3.
The formula for a cube is Length x Width x Height. Since a cube is equal on all sides the length, width, and height are all going to be the same. Take the cube root of 64cm3 is 4cm. Length (4cm) x Width (4cm) x Height (4cm) = 64cm3
The volume of a cube equals its side length cubed. In this case it is 4cm3 which gives a volume of 64cm3
The volume of a cube whose side length is 4 cm is: 64 cm3
The volume of a cube is found by length x width x depth. For instance, a cube measuring 4cm x 4cm x 4cm = 64 cubic centimetres
The volume of a cuboid is given by lbh (length x breadth x height). For a cube, l=b=h and so we can give the formula as l3 (length cubed). In this case the length is 4cm, so plug that into the equation and you get: 43 = 64 Thus the volume of a cube side 4cm is 64cm3
Length=4cm width=4cm height=4cm
Volume of a cube (or cuboid) is length x width x height. In the case of a cube, all three are the same: length = width = height. For a 4cm cube, length = width = height = 4cm, thus: volume = 4cm x 4cm x 4cm = 64cm3.
In a cube the length width and height are all the same so the volume of a cube is s3 where s is the length of a side. In this case, that is (4 cm)3 = 64 cm3
A cubic centimeter is used to describe volume in the measurement of centimeters. Just as area is squared, volume is cubed. Ex: The volume of a cube with dimensions of 4cm.height, by 4cm. width, and 4cm. length is found by 4cm.x4cm.x4cm., giving you64cm. cubed.
The volume of the cube is 4cm x 4cm x 4cm = 64 cm^3. To find the density, divide the mass (50g) by the volume (64 cm^3): density = 50g / 64 cm^3 ≈ 0.78 g/cm^3.
10x4x2= 80cm cube
96 cm.^2
1) It definitely isn't a cube. 2) The volume of the so called "cube" is 64cm3.