Area is a two-dimensional measurement. It tells you how big a two dimensional object is or how large the surface of a three-dimensional object is.
Volume is a three dimensional measurement. It tells you how big the inside of a three-dimensional object is or how much a three-dimensional object can hold inside.
Area is a 2-dimensional measure. Perimeter is 1-dimensional and volume is 3-dimensional.
The ratio of the surface area of a cube to its volume is inversely proportional to the length of its side.
The larger the surface area to volume ratio of a cell, the smaller its size (and vice versa).
to find area you multiply length times width to find volume you multiply length times width times heights
There is no difference in the sense that the volume for either is the length times the area of cross-section.
Area is a 2-dimensional measure. Perimeter is 1-dimensional and volume is 3-dimensional.
it's the problem of surface area -to- volume ratio that mean there is no fitting between increasing of surface area and increasing of volume
As the volume of a cell grows, the surface area grows but not as quickly.
The ratio of the surface area of a cube to its volume is inversely proportional to the length of its side.
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The larger the surface area to volume ratio of a cell, the smaller its size (and vice versa).
to find area you multiply length times width to find volume you multiply length times width times heights
There is no difference in the sense that the volume for either is the length times the area of cross-section.
The volume of any prism is the product of the area of the base and the distance between the two bases(i.e. Height)
There is no direct relationship.
Please see:What_is_the_difference_between_a_hub_and_a_switch
The relationship between the percent volume (not reached by the stain) and the surface area-to-volume ratio would be that the bigger the agar cube size (surface area to volume ratio), the bigger the percent volume. This is true because resources need to travel a farther distance through the cell ("cover more ground", so to speak) in order to be evenly distributed through the cell.