2.5 meters
To find the width of the box, divide the volume by the product of the length and height. In this case, the width would be 75 cubic meters divided by (15 meters * 5 meters), which equals 1 meter.
You can't, cubic meters is volume and mm is length.
The volume of any solid, liquid, gas, plasma, vacuum or theoretical object is how much three-dimensional space it occupies, often quantified numerically. The volume can be measured in cubic meters, cubic centimeters, or liters. The units of the three-dimensional volume depend on the units of length - if the lengths are in meters, the volume will be in cubic meters, etc. To measure a square or cube: Volume = length times width times height.
Its height is: 144 meters
There can be no conversion. A linear metre is a measure of length in 1-dimensional space while a cubic metre is a measure of volume in 3-dimensional space. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed.
You multiply length x width x height. The volume will be in cubic units. For example, if length, width and height are in meters, the volume will be in cubic meters.
To find the width of the box, divide the volume by the product of the length and height. In this case, the width would be 75 cubic meters divided by (15 meters * 5 meters), which equals 1 meter.
To get the volume of a rectangular solid, multiply height times length times width- or 5x3x2. That is 30 cubic meters.
Square meters show that there is a flat area. We calculate the area by length times width. This is two-dimensional. Cubic meters show that there is a volume. We calculate the volume by length times width times height. That is three-dimensional.
Volume = 1*1.5*2 = 3 cubic meters
You can't since they measure different properties. You cannot express a length in units of volume. It's like asking "what is the height of the Statue of Liberty in cubic meters?".
The answer depends on what you wish to convert from.
You can't, cubic meters is volume and mm is length.
A cylinder with a radius of 1.25 meters and a height of 6 meters has a volume of 29.45 cubic meters.
The volume of any solid, liquid, gas, plasma, vacuum or theoretical object is how much three-dimensional space it occupies, often quantified numerically. The volume can be measured in cubic meters, cubic centimeters, or liters. The units of the three-dimensional volume depend on the units of length - if the lengths are in meters, the volume will be in cubic meters, etc. To measure a square or cube: Volume = length times width times height.
A cylinder with a radius of 2 meters and a height of 7 meters has a volume of 87.96 cubic meters.
None Cubic meters are a volume feet are a length