Since 11 is a Prime number, the answer is 1, namely 1 cm by 1 cm by 11 cm. You can re-orient it so that the 11 cm side is the length or width instead of the height, but it is basically the same prism.
Two different rectangular prisms can both have the same volume of 72 cm3
4
9
There are 4 of them.
Yes, rectangular prisms can have different heights and still possess the same volume. The volume of a rectangular prism is calculated by multiplying its length, width, and height (Volume = length × width × height). As long as the product of the length and width adjusts accordingly to compensate for the difference in height, the overall volume can remain constant across different configurations.
Yes, they can. They can also have the same surface area, but different volume.
i did
The volume of a rectangular prism is its cross-section area times its length.
Only one.
4
Yes, they can. They can also have the same surface area, but different volume.
Two examples of prisms that can have a volume of 2400 cubic centimeters are a rectangular prism with dimensions of 20 cm × 12 cm × 10 cm, and a triangular prism with a base area of 100 cm² and a height of 24 cm. The volume of a prism is calculated by multiplying the base area by the height, so both examples meet the volume requirement.