The calculation for volume is different for each three-dimensional form.
A cubic centimeter is the volume of a cube with sides of length 1 cm. A cubic centimeter is also known as a milliliter; 1 cubic centimeter = 1/1000 of a liter, or one millionth of a cubic meter.
the quetion is wrong, are asking about length...or volum?
volum
The question cannot be answered because volume is not measured in square metres, but cubic metres. There is no valid method of conversion from square metres to cubic metres.
In the US its by the gallon or by the cubic foot. Most of the world uses the liter.
The volum is similar, the mass is different.
Each edge is 4 units in length.
Volum = length * width * height. Say your box is 1 m long, 1 m wide and 1 m high. The volum = 1m*1m*1m = 1m3
Gases undergo changes in volume very easily.solid
The volume of a cube is the length of an edge times itself and times itself again. X= Length of an edge Volume is X*X*X or X3
The cubic meter is the metric unit of volume. Cubic meter is the SI unit of volume. It makes no difference whether the volume is occupied by a solid, a liquid, a gas, or a mixture of them, or is empty. Because of subtle differences in the way the density of water is defined [ρ = 1 g/cc at water's greatest density--or at 4°C--(there is a slight difference)], there is a non-unity conversion between liters & cu m: 1 m3 = 999.973 liter (at 20 degree Celsius) A cm3, a CC, or cubic centimeter is 0.999973 ml or milliliter Source: Handbook of Chemistry, Lange
No, solids have a fixed volume that does not change easily. The particles in a solid are packed closely together, which gives them a fixed shape and volume. Changing the volume of a solid typically requires applying a significant amount of force or energy.