The method of finding volume depends entirely on the shape of the 3-dimensional space occupied by the substance or object. The volume of a hexahedron such as a cube or a rectangular shaped box is found by simply multiplying the length, width, and height together, and the product will be the volume in cubic units. For example, a box measuring 12 inches long, 9 inches wide, and 16 inches high has a volume of 12 in x 9 in x 16 in = 1,728 in3 (which is the same as 1 cubic foot). With the metric system, a box 10 cm x 5 cm x 20 cm has a volume of 1,000 cm3 (cubic centimeters), which is the same as 1,000 ml (milliliters) or 1 liter.
The volume of any other regular 3-dimensional geometric figure has its specific formula. The volume of a sphere, for instance, is 1/6 x pi x diameter3, and for a pyramid is 1/3 x base x height.
The volume of an irregularly-shaped object is often impossible to calculate mathematically. An alternate method of finding its volume is to immerse it in water and measure the volume of water displaced. This may be done in a graduated cylinder or beaker for small objects.I LIKE CAKE
Answer: You find the volume of an irregularly shaped object by water displacement.
Answer: Another method is to use integration, which means that for purposes of calculation, the object is divided into lots of small pieces, for example, rectangular-shaped pieces.
use the water displacement theory first fill a graduated cylinder to any amount then place the object in the graduated cylinder. read the current volume and subtract it from the original. example: if you fill a 50 mL graduated cylinder to 10 mL, and add a small rock, the volume will raise to 12 mL. that means the volume for the rock is 2 mL
The radius (diameter in half) times pi times what you get.
To maybe make it easier...
If the radius of the ball is 4, then you time it with pi.
4 * 3,14 = 12,56.
12,56 * 12,56 = 157,7536
So, the volume of the ball is 157,7536 cm3.
To find the volume of a regular solid, multiply its length by its width by its height.
I seriously actually dunno, I suddenly have a mental blackout. HA HA HA
Height x Length x Width.
The height is how tall the ice cube is.
The length is how long the ice cube is
and the width is how wide the ice cube is.
If you know the dimension of the solid, it would be L*W*H.
(* means multiply.)
There are different formulae for different shapes. Determine what shape you are dealing with, then look up the corresponding formula.
It depends on what the shape is.
Find the length width and height of the ice cube
the answers are practically endless. to calculate the volume of a cube/rectangle, such as an ice cube, multiple height by width by length.
Say for example you have an ice cube of which you need to find the volume..First find something that sinks in water..Next,dip it in water and find the volume of water it displaces..For this a Decanting Can might come in handy..Now tie the ice cube with a string of negligible mass and thickness to the mass that sank in water and lower it into water so that the ice cube is completely immersed in water..This time the volume of water displaced will be greater..Subtract the higher value from the lower and you have the volume of ice cube(or any other material for which you are to determine the volume)
Find the cube root of the volume. Volume of a cube = length of side^3 therefore length of side = volume^(1/3)
Take the cube root of the volume.
It depends if the ice cube your talking about have the bigger density than the water which is 1.00G/ML then it will sink .... TO get the density of the cube u have u have to divide the mass over the volume of the cube..
No. The ice will melt such that it fills the volume of ice that the submerged part of the cube displaces.
Assuming the missing words are "to find the VOLUME of a cube" and "what is the VOLUME", the volume of the cube is 19773 cubic inches.
When ice cube is submerged on water...The upthrust created on the ice cube by water is equal to the weight of the displaced water...when the ice cube is melting its volume changes but its weight remains the same and its exactly equal to the weight of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen...therefore the 'volume of of melted water' fits exactly to the 'volume of displaced water when the ice cube was frozen'... So the water level does not change! -Shenal K Mendis ;)
Find the cube root of the volume. You'll probably need a calculator.
Find the cube root of 2744.
That would depend on the temperature of the cube and the water along with the volume of water and the mass of the ice cube and its area.