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density = mass / volume volume of cube = 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1cm3 density = 0.8g / 1cm3 = 0.8g/cm3
A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. For example: a cube measuring 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1 cubic centimetre.
There would be 1,452 1cm cubes that fit in a 12cmx12cmx11cm cube. This is determined by multiplying the dimensions of the larger cube together (12x12x11) and dividing by the volume of the smaller cubes, which is 1cm^3.
It doesn't matter what the unit of measurement is, or what size the cube is. If the length of the side of the cube is 'S' units, then the volume is S3 and the surface area is 6S2. The ratio of volume to surface area is (S3/6S2) = S/6 units. For this one, the ratio is 1/6 cm.
Mass is just the amount of matter an object has. I think you would be looking for the volume of the cube.. Volume = length times width times height. So 1cm, times 1cm, times 1cm would be.. 1 cm cubed.
Oh, dude, it's like super easy. The volume of a cube is just the length of one side cubed. So, for a cube with sides measuring 1cm, the volume would be 1cm x 1cm x 1cm, which equals 1 cubic centimeter. Easy peasy, right?
Volume of a cube = (side × side × side) cubic units. V=1cm x 1cm x 1cm V = 1cm^3
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Centimeters are a measurement of distance, not volume. However, if you were to make a cube that was 1cm long, 1cm tall and 1 cm wide that cube would have a volume of one cubic centimeter (1cm^3) which is equal to one milliliter (1mL)
density = mass / volume volume of cube = 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1cm3 density = 0.8g / 1cm3 = 0.8g/cm3
A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. For example: a cube measuring 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1 cubic centimetre.
There would be 1,452 1cm cubes that fit in a 12cmx12cmx11cm cube. This is determined by multiplying the dimensions of the larger cube together (12x12x11) and dividing by the volume of the smaller cubes, which is 1cm^3.
It doesn't matter what the unit of measurement is, or what size the cube is. If the length of the side of the cube is 'S' units, then the volume is S3 and the surface area is 6S2. The ratio of volume to surface area is (S3/6S2) = S/6 units. For this one, the ratio is 1/6 cm.
The specific volume of gold is around 0.001 m³/kg at room temperature and pressure. This means that 1 kilogram of gold occupies 0.001 cubic meters of space.
The formula for the volume of a cube is V = width x length x height, therefore V = 1cmx1cmx1cm V = 1cm3
this means that copper is 2.7g/cm3