It would depend on what shape it was.
It can have any dimensions as long as they equal 8 cubic feet.
It could have any dimensions as long as they equal 1,069 cubic feet.
Any dimensions so long as they equal 16,710 cubic feet.
Usually it would be about 48" high by 65" long
To store 5000 cubic meters, you need a storage area that is also 5000 square meters if the height of the storage space is 1 meter. This assumes a cubic storage space with equal dimensions in length, width, and height.
Possibly 10 X 10 X 10 cubic gallons, but more likely closer to 5 X 10 X 20 cubic gallons. Any combination of numbers that will mutiply together and make 1000 cubic gallons.
You have three dimensions, so you are no longer measuring SQUARE feet but CUBIC feet. 10x10x12=1200 cubic feet.
There are an infinite variety of shapes and dimensions that one cubic foot of space can have.
I'm sorry, but I don't have access to specific exercises or their details, including exercise 22. To calculate the volume of a storage unit, you'll need to know its dimensions (length, width, and height) and use the formula for volume (length × width × height). If you provide those dimensions, I can help you find the volume in cubic yards.
That is related to the fact that space has 3 dimensions.
If those dimensions are feet, that's 2853.125 cubic feet. If those dimensions are inches, that's 1.65 cubic feet.
The dimensions.