1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeters. The cube root of 1000 is 10.
The volume of a cube is calculated by cubing the length of one of its sides. In this case, the edge length of the cube is 512 units, so the volume would be 512 * 512 * 512 = 134,217,728 cubic units.
The volume of a cube with a side length of 1 decimetre is one litre.
To find the length of one edge of the cube, you would calculate the cube root of the volume. In this case, the cube root of 150 cubic centimeters is approximately 5.3 centimeters. Therefore, the length of one edge of the cube is 5.3 centimeters.
it's V=LxWxH (volume is equal to length times width times height)
To find the length of a side of a cube with a volume of 700 cubic inches, you can calculate the cube root of 700. The cube root of 700 is approximately 8.85 inches. Hence, the length of a side of the cube is 8.85 inches.
That is the volume of a cube with a side length of 1 decimeter.
A cube with a side length of 10cm has a volume of 1000cm3 which equates to 1 Liter.
The volume of a cube is x3 where x is the side length. Therefore the volume of half a cube would be x3/2. For instance, if the side length of a cube was 2cm, the volume of one half would be 23/2 which comes out at 4cm3
To find the side length of a cube with a volume of 8cm^3, you can use the formula for the volume of a cube, which is side length cubed. Therefore, you would take the cube root of the volume to find the side length. In this case, the cube root of 8cm^3 is 2cm, so the side length of the cube is 2cm.
Each side of the cube would be 15cm in length.
The volume of a cube is determined by cubing the length of one edge, so the cube root of the volume will give you the length of an edge. (In a cube, all of the edges are the same length)
Volume=Length*Breadth*Height. therefore SI Unit of Volume is Metre cube (M^3)
The volume of a cube depends on the length of its side.
No, The volume of the cube would be the length multiplied by the length multiplied by the the length. Volume=Length X Length X Length (of a cube) V=L^3 The proof of this involves some work, but I'm assuming you don't want the proof behind this. http://www.math.com/tables/geometry/volumes.htm
The volume of Cube B is 216 cm3
If you were given the size of the cube (the length of one side), the volume would be the side length cubed. Example, a 3-inch cube has a volume of 3 cubed or 27 cubic inches.
The volume of a cube is the side cubed, so a cube with a side length of 4 has a volume of 43 = 64.