None. Its a hole.
But you would have removed 3 x 2 x 2 = 12 cubic meters of dirt, which is 120,000 cm3.
12
The volume = 6 x 2 x 1 = 12 cubic meters Actually there is no dirt in a hole.
The density of pure copper at room temperature is 8.96 grams per cubic centimeter; or in other words its specific gravity is such that one cc of it would weigh 8.96 times that of a cc of water.
The solid (normal) phase of uranium has a specific density. It weighs 19.1 grams per cubic centimeter; this converts to: 159.397226 pounds per US gallon.In the liquid phase--at its melting point--it has a specific density of 17.3 grams per cubic centimeter; this coverts to: 144.375498 pounds per US gallon.Uranium price, as unrefined oxide U3O8: 115 USD/kg (August 2011).
this indicates that gold is much more dense than quartz and olivine
200 dollars per cubic yard
NONE! The hole does have a volume of 3 x 2 x 2 = 12 cubic meters. 1 cubic meter is equal to 1,000,000 cubic centimeters. So you could FILL THE HOLE with 12,000,000 cubic centimeters of soil.
340 a ml is a cubic centimeter.
A cubic centimeter is a cubic centimeter always and no matter what! It doesn't matter what the temperature is! However, I think you are asking for the mass of a cubic centimeter of water 4 °C and that is exactly 1 gram.
Density of latex is 0.920 - 0.960 grams per cubic centimeter.
A cubic centimeter (cm3) is a unit of volume that equals to a one thousandth (0.0010) of a liter or to one milliliter.
1 meter = 100 centimeters1 cubic meter = 1,000,000 cubic centimetersThe difference in numbers between 1,000,000 and 100 is 999,900 .
That IS the math problem - the question how many cubic centimeters are in a cubic meter.
One milliliter = one cubic centimeter. They are identical volumes.
A milliliter (mL) and a cubic centimeter (cc) refer to the same measurement.
That is the approximate mass of one cubic centimeter of water.
One cubic centimeter of water would fit into that cup, and it would weigh 1 gram.
1 cubic centimeter of space = 0.001 liter of space, regardless of what's in it, and even if it's empty.