The answer will depend on which of the two measures is the length and what the other one is: radius or diameter.
The answer will depend on which of the two measures is the length and what the other one is: radius or diameter.
The answer will depend on which of the two measures is the length and what the other one is: radius or diameter.
The answer will depend on which of the two measures is the length and what the other one is: radius or diameter.
A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. For example: a cube measuring 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1 cubic centimetre.
density = mass / volume volume of cube = 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1cm3 density = 0.8g / 1cm3 = 0.8g/cm3
11cm x 5cm = 55cm2.
Volume of a cylinder = pi x (radius)2 x (height)
Cylinder Volume = (pi) x radius2 x height 648...APEX :)
A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. For example: a cube measuring 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1 cubic centimetre.
3cm x 6cm x 1cm = 18 cm3
If the shape is a cuboid, then the volume is 6 cubic centimetres.
Volume of a cube = (side × side × side) cubic units. V=1cm x 1cm x 1cm V = 1cm^3
3
Think about this as a dice. The dice is 1cm x 1cm x 1cm. The volume of the dice is 1 x 1 x 1. The sides of the dice are 1x1 How many sides on a cube? 6 x 1 x 1 = 6cm Surface area = 6cm Then make that into a ratio, sorry I forgot that part of the question: surface area is 6 Volume is 1 so 6:1
density = mass / volume volume of cube = 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1cm3 density = 0.8g / 1cm3 = 0.8g/cm3
11cm x 5cm = 55cm2.
The volume is answered in cubic centimeters, which is typed out like this 1cm*5cm*6cm = 30 cm3
You need to multiply three lengths to get a volume - a volume has three dimensions. If you have a cube with 1 cm. on side (1 cm x 1 cm x 1 cm), the volume is 1 cubic centimeter.
By plugging them into the formula for the volume of a cylinder:volume = πr2hwhere:π = ratio of circumference to diameter of a circle (~= 3.142)r = radius of cylinder = diameter ÷ 2h = height of cylinder.That's how to find the volume, this is it actually being found:volume = πr2h= π x (diameter ÷ 2)2 x height= π x (9 cm ÷ 2)2 x 11 cm~= 700 cm3
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.