5*1.5 = 7.5 units.
Multiply 9*16 to see how much it would measure in square meters. Then, multiply it by 1.25 which is the cost of each square meter.
The weight of 1 square meter in tons depends on the material and its density. To calculate this, you would need to know the thickness of the material in meters and its density in tons per cubic meter. By multiplying the area (1 square meter) by the thickness and density, you can determine the weight in tons. For example, if you have a material with a density of 2 tons per cubic meter and a thickness of 0.1 meters, then 1 square meter would weigh 0.2 tons.
Because a square meter is two dimensional and a cubic meter is three dimensional, there would theoretically be an infinite number of square meters within a cubic meter.
A half square meter is equal to 0.5 square meters. To calculate the area of a square, you multiply the length by the width. Therefore, if a square has sides that are each 1 meter in length, the area would be 1 square meter. Half of that would be 0.5 square meters.
A square meter measures area, not length. Therefore, a 40 square meter home does not have a specific length in meters. The dimensions of the home would need to be provided in order to determine the lengths.
The answer would be 210 square meters.
Area
Multiply width by length to get the area. The answer would be 25 square meters.
It would be a very small room. More like a closet. Try 1 meter by 3 meter, or 1.5 meter by 2 meter both would make 3 square meters.
Since square meters measure area, there are no meters in 140 square meters. However, if you are looking for the length of one side of a square with an area of 140 square meters, you would need to take the square root of 140, which is approximately 11.8 meters.
Oh, dude, it's like converting apples to oranges, but with meters. To convert running meters to square meters, you just need to know the width of the material. If the width is 1 meter, then 1 running meter is equal to 1 square meter. If the width is different, you multiply the running meters by the width in meters to get the square meters. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy!
A 28 meter square is 28 times 28 meters or 784 square meters. If it is one tenth of a meter (10 cm) deep, it has a volume of 78.4 cubic metersIf you mean 28 square meters (like a pool 4 meters by 7 meters) then the volume one tenth of a meter deep is 2.8 cubic meters.