The area of the cardboard is 9*6 = 54 square feet.
A cube has six square faces, so each face will be 54/6 = 9 square feet.A square with an area of 9 sq feet has sides of sqrt(9) = 3 feet.
The area of the cardboard is 9*6 = 54 square feet.
A cube has six square faces, so each face will be 54/6 = 9 square feet.A square with an area of 9 sq feet has sides of sqrt(9) = 3 feet.
The area of the cardboard is 9*6 = 54 square feet.
A cube has six square faces, so each face will be 54/6 = 9 square feet.A square with an area of 9 sq feet has sides of sqrt(9) = 3 feet.
The area of the cardboard is 9*6 = 54 square feet.
A cube has six square faces, so each face will be 54/6 = 9 square feet.A square with an area of 9 sq feet has sides of sqrt(9) = 3 feet.
A cube would not have such dimensions but if you meant a cuboid then it is:- 5*12*9 = 540 cubic cm
That is because a cube has 3 dimensions, and a square has 2.That is because a cube has 3 dimensions, and a square has 2.That is because a cube has 3 dimensions, and a square has 2.That is because a cube has 3 dimensions, and a square has 2.
This question cannot be answered sensibly. A metre square is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A decimetre cube is a measure of volume, with dimensions [L3]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
The question, as stated, cannot be answered sensibly. A square inch is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A gram is a measure of mass, with dimensions [M]. The two measure different things and basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information. As a simple mental exercise, consider a thin sheet of metal 1" x 1" and then compare its mass to a cube of the same metal:1 " x 1" x 1". Both peices are 1 sq inch but the mass of the cube will be much greater - how much greater will depend on how thin the sheet is.
None. A milliltre cube is a measure in 9-dimensional hyperspace! A metre cube is a measure of volume in "normal" 3-dimensional space. According to basic dimensional analysis, conversion between measures with different dimensions is not valid.
No.
A cube has three dimensions: length, width, and height. These dimensions define its shape and volume in three-dimensional space. Each face of the cube is a square, and there are a total of six faces.
It is a 10 cm cube.
Depends on the dimensions of the cube. What is the length, width, and height?
Roughly a 1 centimeter cube.
In a logical cube, the part that provides context to the measures data is known as "dimensions." Dimensions can be broken down into hierarchies, which organize data into levels of detail, such as time (year, quarter, month), geography (country, state, city), or product categories. Attributes are the specific characteristics or properties of these dimensions that further define and refine the data analysis. Together, dimensions, hierarchies, and attributes enable users to perform comprehensive data analysis and reporting.
Well with a cube all 3 sides are of equal length, thus if one side measures 3 cm then the other two dimensions (its width and its height) measure 3 cm too. To find the volume of a cube you multiply its length by its width by its height:- 3*3*3 = 27 cubic centimeters.