Finding the volume of a regular object cube can be hard. This will be hard because there is no real formula for measuring irregular objects.
The answer depends on what information you do have about the object.
a square is a 2 dimension object. we can not find volume of a 2-D object... if u are asking that of a cube with equal sides, then simply find (a^3) where a is side of the cube.
You measure its mass and volume and then density = mass/volume.
10x10x10=1000
A cube is, by definition, regular. Do you mean a cuboid? The volume of a cuboid is length × width × height or length × width × depth (where depth and height are the length in the third dimension). For irregular three dimensional shapes, divide them up into smaller shapes for which the volume can be calculated and add them together. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For real world irregular three dimensional object it is impractical to try to split the object up into smaller shapes. In this case get a cuboid of water (or other liquid) in a tank, measure its volume (as above), submerge the object completely in the liquid and re-measure the volume of the liquid (the tank should have excess capacity greater than the volume of the object so that no liquid spills): the volume of the object is the difference between the two measurements of the volume of liquid.
Finding the volume of a regular object cube can be hard. This will be hard because there is no real formula for measuring irregular objects.
The answer depends on what information you do have about the object.
a square is a 2 dimension object. we can not find volume of a 2-D object... if u are asking that of a cube with equal sides, then simply find (a^3) where a is side of the cube.
You measure its mass and volume and then density = mass/volume.
A regular object is something that has even sides and is flat. To find a regular objects volume you do lxwxh
When the object is a regular, geometric shape.
10x10x10=1000
For a regular six sided object: a cube or rectangular prism (box); just multiply length by width by height. Whatever units you use for the measurements, the answer is in cubic units.
Mass
Using displacement in water. Just subtract the height of the water before and after you put the object in.
If you were given the size of the cube (the length of one side), the volume would be the side length cubed. Example, a 3-inch cube has a volume of 3 cubed or 27 cubic inches.
A cube is, by definition, regular. Do you mean a cuboid? The volume of a cuboid is length × width × height or length × width × depth (where depth and height are the length in the third dimension). For irregular three dimensional shapes, divide them up into smaller shapes for which the volume can be calculated and add them together. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For real world irregular three dimensional object it is impractical to try to split the object up into smaller shapes. In this case get a cuboid of water (or other liquid) in a tank, measure its volume (as above), submerge the object completely in the liquid and re-measure the volume of the liquid (the tank should have excess capacity greater than the volume of the object so that no liquid spills): the volume of the object is the difference between the two measurements of the volume of liquid.