The amount of space occupied by an object is called it's volume. Volume can be used to measure the amount of space occupied by solids, liquids or gases. Solids are relativly easy for cubiods V=l x w x h and for other regular shapes similar calculations exist. For irregular solids displacment can be used, the amount of water displaced by the solid is equal to it's volume. Liquids can placed into measuring vessles, the vessles are solids usually of regular shape with a known space inside them, an example being a measuring cylinder. Gases can be compressed to take up less volume so volume measurements are always quoted with a pressure and temperature. Gasses are measured in a similar way to liquids however the vessles used must be gas tight, an example being a gas syringe. Because the object is measured in 3 dimensions cubic units are used for measuremants eg. cm3, m3. As most substances expand when heated so measurements of volume must take into consideration the temperature at which the measurment was taken. Air pressure may also alter the volume of a substance. It is usual to quote volume measurements for standard temperature and pressure.
The volume of sound is measured in decibles(dB) with a dB meter.
just use LxWxH (lengthxwidthxheight) or if it can fit in a beacker use water displacement
there, what a very interesting question, i am professor Allan Shearer and i will answer your question..........
I am guessing you are looking for the formulae.
Well each 3D shape has its own volume formulae.
For Example - A cube has one length of 20cm
As you know a cubes dimensions are all the same so all the lengths are the same
here is the formulae for that sum......
Volume = length x breadth x height
Volume = 20 x 20 x 20
Volume = 8000cm3
Where as.......if we had a cylinder with a diameter of 20cm and a height of 40cm
the formulae would be.............
Volume = pi x r2 x h
Volume = 3.14 x 10 x 10 x 40
Volume = 12560cm3
As you can probably see each shape has a different formulae....... for more formuales just contact professor Allan!
Here is an example. 3x3x3=27+27=54.
54 is the answer.
To calculate volume you take the length, width, and the height and multiply them or just take the base and multiply that by the height.
Volume of a cuboid: length x width x height
for cube: length3
for cylinder: (pi)r2 x height
What do you need the volume of? .... typically width x height x length ..... gazillions of formulas available for various other things (pyramids, cones, spheres, Rosie O'Donnell, etc.)
The formula for volume is Length x Width x Height.
You times the legth by width by height and your answer will be .........cm3
listen to my answer and I can help you don't read that whole thing. just use lenghxwidthxhight it's that simple bye
You can solve volume like this v=l*w*h
density equals mass/volume, volume equals mass/density, and mass equals density times volume.
volume after anchor was in water minus volume of water without anchor in it = the volume of the anchor
There are Magnitude scales for Tsunamis, but you have to be a maths wizz to work them out, using the formula Mt = a log h + b log R = D.
Volume is defined only for three-dimensional objects. A perfectly flat surface (impossible to find or create in our three-dimensional physical world) cannot have a volume.
Since density is defined as mass divided by volume, it follows that if you divide mass by density you will get volume. For example: 10 grams divided by 2grams/cc = 5 cc. (cc is cubic centimeter)
with maths
Tony Gadis
You can get free maths lessons online at www.extra maths work.co.uk
So that you get the right accurate answer. If it was in a maths test and you didn't use volume, you would fail.Count Olaf
mensuration is taking the measurement of something's area,volume, etc.
chance
Usually when you are predicting what your opponent will do next or are trying to work out a reliable strategy to win the game. Usually maths has nothing to do with maths games though. Usually when you are predicting what your opponent will do next or are trying to work out a reliable strategy to win the game. Usually maths has nothing to do with maths games though.
by the calculater
You cannot work out pheta until it is defined.
PAVParallel Access Volumes maybe
It doesn't work. It just lazes around all day. Curse that Grid System! It never works for maths...
Physics requires maths, to work out the force of something. and for example if you have the time it takes an item to arrive as well as the distance you can work out the speed