There are 100 centimetres in a metre.
So, if the water can be considered as solid cubes each one centimetre along each side then a line of 100 would cover the width of the container.
A square 100 wide by 100 deep would cover the base of the container.
A further 99 layers would fill the container.
So now we have 100 x 100 x 100, or 1,000,000 cubes of water each 1 cm3 in volume
As 1 cm3 is 1 millilitre, which is 1/1000 of a litre, then 1,000 litres would fill the container.
A cubical container that is one meter (100 centimeters) on each side would have a volume of 100 cm x 100 cm x 100 cm = 1,000,000 cubic centimeters or 1,000 liters. It would require 1,000 liters of water to fill this container.
One cubic centimeter of pure water has a mass of one gram.
1 cubic centimeter and 1 milliliter are equal volumes, and may be used interchangably.
Gram.
three
Because the salt gathers together and the original elements are squares.
It is 0.015625 millilitres.
To find the length of each edge of the cubical box, take the cube root of the volume. In this case, the cube root of 3.375 cubic meters is approximately 1.5 meters. Each edge of the box would be 1.5 meters in length.
The coefficient of thermal expansion depends on the temperature and pressure. It a pressure of 1 atmosphere the coefficient of thermal expansion are:at 4 deg C : –0.1321 at 20 deg C : 0.1212 at 50 deg C : 0.4280 at 100 deg C: 0.7454.
If you mean a cubical container, yes - that would be exactly one liter.
the sides of the cubical box would be 7 meters
Cubical.
creativity
Salt (sodium chloride) has a cubical crystal lattice. So, at any scale, it appears cubical.
Spherical ;)
96 g
No its standard form
I think it is a cubical which you shower in.
Cubical means like a cube -- box-like. A cube is box shape with all edges equal. All the sides are squares.
Salt Crystals can come in many forms, one such is a cubical formation.
Jonas bros rule