A square centimetre is a unit of area. A cubic metre is a unit of volume. The two units are therefore incompatible.
Infinite, in theory. cm2 is a measurement of area, m3 is volume. If you had a 1m3 block, then the top face would be 1m x 1m, having 10000cm2, if you then sliced this layer off you would have another 10000cm2 below it, and so on. It depends how thinly you slice the block.
27.53 cm2 approx.27.53 cm2 approx.27.53 cm2 approx.27.53 cm2 approx.
Just divide the numbers, and the answer will have no measurement units.
A = 615.75 cm2
.001 m3
Infinite, in theory. cm2 is a measurement of area, m3 is volume. If you had a 1m3 block, then the top face would be 1m x 1m, having 10000cm2, if you then sliced this layer off you would have another 10000cm2 below it, and so on. It depends how thinly you slice the block.
You measure the mass and you measure the volume. You divide the mass by the volume. If you have uses International Units then you will get the specific mass or density (kg/l = g/cm2 = g/ml = tons /m3)
Formula: kg/cm2 x 9.807 = newtons/cm2
1 * 11 = 11 cm2 2 * 10 = 20 cm2 3 * 9 = 27 cm2 4 * 8 = 32 cm2 5 * 7 = 35 cm2 6 * 6 = 36 cm2 7 * 5 = 35 cm2 8 * 4 = 32 cm2 9 * 3 = 27 cm2 10 * 2 = 20 cm2 11 * 1 = 11 cm2
27.53 cm2 approx.27.53 cm2 approx.27.53 cm2 approx.27.53 cm2 approx.
17982cm3 to cm2
Density 10 kg/cm2, 16 kg/cm2, 24 kg/cm2, 48 kg/cm2 etc Uday Shah
Sorry the options are actually 64 cm2, 16 cm2, 32 cm2, 50 cm2. Thanks
10000 cm2 in one m2
You times the m2 by 10,000 to get cm2. and You divide cm2 by 10,000 to get m2
Just divide the numbers, and the answer will have no measurement units.
32 cm2