They are similar because they all have something to do with an object and are all SI Units.
one cubic cm = one mL
and one mL of water weighs one gram at 4 degrees celcius
They are measures of size in 1-dimensional space and 3-dimensional space, respectively.
They are both units of measurement
They are physical measures of matter.
Although length and volume are both physical quantities ,their standard units are different that is for length the standard unit is meter and for volume the standard unit is cubic meter (m3). Also their dimensional formula, for length it is [L] and for volume it is [L]3
A millilitre (ml) is a measure of volume. A metre is a measure of length. Length cannot 'contain' volume
you can adjust them to b higher or lower
Volume is derived, from length.
That is correct. Volume is height x length x width.
Length and volume can both be used to estimate how large something is, but they are really different types of things. Length is just one dimension of measurement, and volume requires three dimensions of measurement.
Length and volume cannot be combined.
If only the length is doubled, the volume is also doubled.If only the length is doubled, the volume is also doubled.If only the length is doubled, the volume is also doubled.If only the length is doubled, the volume is also doubled.
A metre is a unit of length, not volume. A length cannot be converted into volume.
volume = length*height*width Rearrange the formula: length = volume/height*width
Length and volume are not equivalent measurements. Length is a two dimensional measurement while volume is a three dimensional measurement.
length
They are measures of length.
You really should know how to answer that question.Volume = (length) x (width) x (height) .Length = (volume) / (width x height)Width = (volume) / (length x height)Height = (volume) / (length x width)
The formula for volume is length x width x height = volume. So if you take the volume and divide it by the length and width it should give you the height.
height*length*width = volume Divide both sides by length*width to find the height: height = volume divided by length*width
length = volume/cross-section