Answer is 1.2686567164179104477611940298507cm
The amount of brass cannot be measured in terms of its area. It must be measured in terms of its volume (or mass) because the answer will depend on the thickness of the brass.
The Tuba
The answer is 0.5
a brass
Much residential door hardware is made of brass. However, depending on the quality of the hardware more brass or less brass is used. High quality hardware (for example Baldwin Hardware or Hager Hinge) is made of heavy gauge (thickness) tarnish & scratch resistant brass. Lower quality hardware (for example Kwikset and store branded hardware) is made of thin gauge (thickness) brass. Sometimes lower quality hardware is brass clad steel or brass plated steel.
1 cubic meter = 0354 brass
The word "brass" refers to a measure of quantity for loose material (like sand, metal, etc). This term is common in India. One brass equals one hundred cubic feet volume. Calculate the volume of sand and divide by 100 cubic feet to get the number of brass units.
8.33 gm/cm³
First, two things. 1) Since brass is a solid at standard temperature and pressure, it is unusual to specify its density in fluid volume units, such as gallons. 2) Brass is an alloy comprising differing amounts of different metals, so its density must be specified as a range. Brass is about 8.5 times denser than water. It has a density of 8.4 to 8.75 grams per cubic centimeter. That translates to 70 to 73 pounds per US gallon.
The units of volume are independent of the material. A unit volume of brass is the same as a unit volume of concrete or cake-mix The units of voulme are the (linear units of length) cubed, e.g. 1 cubic metre = 1m3 = the volume of a block 1m X 1m x 1m - or indeed 0.5m X 1m x 2m. or feet or inches or miles.
the longest held note for a brass instrument was Sara Ferrell which was held for 14 full measures.
It depends on how big the brass is compared to the amount of water. If they are both the same size then they occupy the same volume! If you mean "does brass take up more volume than water for the same weight", then no it does not. The density is a measure of how heavy a substance is for its size, and may be measured in grams per cubic centimetre (equivalent to kilograms per cubic decimetre), kilograms per cubic metre, or some other unit. For water, the density is 1000 kg/m3, but for brass the figure is 8400 to 8700 kg/m3. So one cubic metre of water has a mass of 1000 kg, but the same volume of brass has a mass over eight times higher. To put that another way, one tonne of brass would take up much less space (volume) than one tonne of water.