In your mind's eye, picture an opened but empty cardboard box which is 3x3 whatevers. We'll call them 'centimeters' (cm) so as not to confuse you. You will find that NINE 1x1cm boxes will fit inside, forming a 'bottom layer'. Two more layers on top of that and you will have ONE CUBIC (whatever) CENTIMETER. If you had started with one-foot square boxes, the total of twenty-seven 'units' would equal ONE SQUARE YARD. ( AKA: 3x3X3 or 3, cubed 'whatevers')
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The largest square that you can fit in any cube will have each corner 1/4 of the way away from a corner of the cube and will have a side length of s*3√2/4 where s is the length of the sides of the cube. For a unit cube, the side length is 1 by definition, meaning that this largest square will have a side length of 3√2/4 and that its area will be 9/8 units squared.
A 1-foot cube has dimensions of 12 inches on each side. To find out how many 1-inch cubes fit into it, calculate the volume of the 1-foot cube, which is (12 \times 12 \times 12 = 1,728) cubic inches. Since each 1-inch cube occupies 1 cubic inch, a total of 1,728 one-inch cubes can fit into a 1-foot cube.
A cube would fit the given description.
1,000,000 cm or One Million cm
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The largest square that you can fit in any cube will have each corner 1/4 of the way away from a corner of the cube and will have a side length of s*3√2/4 where s is the length of the sides of the cube. For a unit cube, the side length is 1 by definition, meaning that this largest square will have a side length of 3√2/4 and that its area will be 9/8 units squared.
first take one side of the cube...on one single side of the cube you can fit 4 squares along each edge, for a total of 16 on one cube side. Then multiply this by 6 sides. 16 x 6 = 96 tiles
Without specific measurements for the small cube there's no way to tell; it could be anywhere from 1 small cube to an infinite number. Assuming, however, that the small cube is 1 cm x 1 cm x 1cm (1 cm cubed), then 8000 of the small cubes would fit inside. That's 20*20*20, because the big cube is 20 times as large in three different dimensions.
5*5*5 = 125 of them.
I suspect that "cube" is the answer you are looking for. A regular tetrahedron could also fit the measurements, as could a sphere. In fact, if you were to start with a perfect cube of material and ensure that some part of each face was retained, one could argue that anything carved out from that original cube had equal length, height, and width.
A cube would fit the given description.
1,000,000 cm or One Million cm
The answer is 1,944 cm cubed
A larger cube that is 1 meter on each side has a volume of (1 , \text{m}^3), which is equivalent to (1,000,000 , \text{cm}^3) (since (1 , \text{m} = 100 , \text{cm})). Each small cube is (1 , \text{cm}^3) in volume. Therefore, a total of (1,000,000) small cubes, each 1 cm on a side, will fit into the larger cube.
754,920 bills fit in the cube
Half the length of a side of the square.