There is not enough information.
For example, if the box measures 4 cm * 0.5 cm * 0.5 cm then no cube will fit in it.
no - imagine 60 tiny 1cm x 1cm x 1cm cubes. Then imagine you have 60 of them. That many tiny cubes does not fill a whole backpack.
It depends on the density of the material of which the bar is made.
True
in cm, the third power means that its is in 3 demensions. so, something that is 4cm to the third power would be the same size as four blocks of wood, where each block is 1cm long, 1cm thick, and 1cm tall (the three demensions of volume). when converting cm cubed(to the third power=cubed) to ml, however, the formula would simply be 1cm cubed=1ml
10dm=1cm
1000mm3
15. 1cm cubed = 1ml.
1.53 = 3.375 cubic cm
1 trillion miles on 1cm cubed of fuel
1ml equals 1cm 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?
no - imagine 60 tiny 1cm x 1cm x 1cm cubes. Then imagine you have 60 of them. That many tiny cubes does not fill a whole backpack.
1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1 cubed cmLength x width x depth.
Neither. They are identical volumes.
1 milliliter
U got me, I give up : ).
1 ml=1cm^3 so you have 50cm^3