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Given the surface area of a rectangular prism, there are infinitely many rectangular prisms possible.
Cubes have a square on each side, but rectangular prisms have rectangles or squares.
For the same base dimensions (base area) and the same height, the rectangular prism has more surface area.
Given any rectangular prism, there are infinitely many other rectangular prisms with exactly the same surface area.
If the ratio of the dimensions of the larger prism to the smaller prism is r then the ratio of their volumes is r^3.
Given the surface area of a rectangular prism, there are infinitely many rectangular prisms possible.
Dimensions are linear measures whereas the volume is a cubic measure.
Cubes have a square on each side, but rectangular prisms have rectangles or squares.
2 prisms
They are all rectangular prisms!
For the same base dimensions (base area) and the same height, the rectangular prism has more surface area.
Given any rectangular prism, there are infinitely many other rectangular prisms with exactly the same surface area.
If the ratio of the dimensions of the larger prism to the smaller prism is r then the ratio of their volumes is r^3.
Two different rectangular prisms can both have the same volume of 72 cm3
You could share what information you did have and then there may be a way to get the missing dimensions. As it is, there is nothing that can be said other than to suggest that you measure them.
4
It could be anything.... the question needs to be more specific.