The mass of a cube is equal to the volume times the density, so side cubed times density. The corresponding SI units would be: meters for length; kilogram per cubic meters for volume; kilograms for mass.
The answer depends on how big a cube.
Yes
the mass of an ice cube is best measured in grams using a balance.
the total amount of water in a ice cube
density of 1.5 cm tall and mass of 1.0 g of a cube of a cork=mass/volume of cube== 1.0/(1.5*1.5*1.5)gm/cm3=.2963gm/cm3
It's called "the mass of the cube" or "the cube's mass".
The unit of length is metre(m), unit of volume is centimetre cube(c.c), unit of mass is kilogram(kg).
To find the density you need the mass and volume and then, density = mass/volume. Given a ruler, you can easily measure an edge of the cube. If that is x units, then the volume is x3 cubic units. However, it is not clear how you find a mass with just a balance. You need some standard weights, but these do not appear to be provided. You are stuck and cannot answer the question.
A cube has 12 edges. With a total length of 48 units, each edge is 48 units ÷ 12 = 4 units volume = edge_length3 = (4 units)3 = 64 cubic units.
If the mass of the cube is 96 g, what is the density of the cube material?
It will be half the mass of the whole cube.
A cube with a side length of 23 units has a volume of 12,167 cubic units.
6*x2 square units where the length of each side of the cube is x units.
A cube with a side length of 3 units has a volume of 27 cubic units.
The volume of a cube with edges of 4.5 units is: 91.13 units3
The side length of a cube when the volume is 2,197 cubic units is: 13 units.
a cube has 6 f these