It is (S/s)3 where S and s are the lengths of the sides of the larger and smaller cubes, respectively.
It is 28652616 metres^3.
The ratio of the surface areas of two similar figures is equal to the square of the ratio of their corresponding linear dimensions. Given the surface areas are 27 and 1331, the ratio of their corresponding linear dimensions is the square root of ( \frac{1331}{27} ). Since the volume ratio is the cube of the linear dimension ratio, we can find the larger volume by calculating ( \frac{1331}{27} ) and then multiplying the smaller volume (18) by the cube of that ratio. The larger volume is therefore ( 18 \times \left(\frac{1331}{27}\right)^{\frac{3}{2}} = 486 ).
1mm cube has volume of 1mm3 and a surface area of 6*(1*1) = 6mm²2mm cube has a volume of 8mm3 and a surface area of 6(2*2)=24mm²Ratio for 1mm cube is 6-1 and ratio for 2mm cube is 3-1 ■
Each cut exposes new surface (that was previously in the interior of the cube) without changing the total volume, so yes. If you have two numbers, and one of them changes when the other doesn't, the ratio between the two numbers will change.
It is (S/s)3 where S and s are the lengths of the sides of the larger and smaller cubes, respectively.
It is 28652616 metres^3.
Edge of the larger cube = 32 cm Volume of the larger cube = (32 cm)3 = 32768 cm3 Edge of the smaller cube = 4 cm Volume of the smaller cube = (4 cm)3 = 64 cm3 Since the smaller cubes are cut from the larger cube, volume of all of them will be equal to that of the larger cube. ∴ Total number of smaller cubes × Volume of the smaller cube = Volume of the larger cube ⇒ Total number of smaller cubes = Volume of the larger cube ÷ Volume of the smaller cube ⇒ Total number of smaller cubes = 32768 ÷ 64 = 512 Thus, 512 smaller cubes can be cut from the larger one.
The ratio of the surface areas of two similar figures is equal to the square of the ratio of their corresponding linear dimensions. Given the surface areas are 27 and 1331, the ratio of their corresponding linear dimensions is the square root of ( \frac{1331}{27} ). Since the volume ratio is the cube of the linear dimension ratio, we can find the larger volume by calculating ( \frac{1331}{27} ) and then multiplying the smaller volume (18) by the cube of that ratio. The larger volume is therefore ( 18 \times \left(\frac{1331}{27}\right)^{\frac{3}{2}} = 486 ).
1mm cube has volume of 1mm3 and a surface area of 6*(1*1) = 6mm²2mm cube has a volume of 8mm3 and a surface area of 6(2*2)=24mm²Ratio for 1mm cube is 6-1 and ratio for 2mm cube is 3-1 ■
No. The surface to volume ratio of a sphere is always smaller than that of a cube. This is because the sphere has the smallest surface area compared to its volume, while the cube has the largest surface area compared to its volume.
Each cut exposes new surface (that was previously in the interior of the cube) without changing the total volume, so yes. If you have two numbers, and one of them changes when the other doesn't, the ratio between the two numbers will change.
For a cube with edge length, L. Surface area = 6L2. Volume = L3. So ratio of Surface Area / Volume = 6 / L. Therefore, as the side length, L, increases, the ratio will decrease.
3:5
The cube has a larger volume.
The ratio of the surface area of a cube to its volume is inversely proportional to the length of its side.
To find out how many 0.5x0.5x0.5 cubes fit into a 5x5x5 cube, first calculate the volume of each cube. The volume of the 5x5x5 cube is 125 cubic units, while the volume of a 0.5x0.5x0.5 cube is 0.125 cubic units. Dividing the volume of the larger cube by the volume of the smaller cube gives 125 / 0.125 = 1000. Therefore, 1000 of the 0.5x0.5x0.5 cubes can fit into the 5x5x5 cube.