An area measuring 135 mm wide x 215 mm long x 580 mm deep has a volume of 0.0168345 cubic meters.
You need 1.35 cubic meters for each centimeter deep.
Volume is the metric unit used to measure water in a lake. The common metric units for measuring volume include liters (L) and cubic meters (m^3). These units are used to quantify the amount of water present in a given space, such as a lake, by measuring the three-dimensional space it occupies.
It is deep for a free diver and it can get dark at 50 meters deep in an ocean
200 meters is 656.17 feet.
about 520 meters
There are 60,000 m3 in a 15cm deep plot with an area of 40 hectares.
A 28 meter square is 28 times 28 meters or 784 square meters. If it is one tenth of a meter (10 cm) deep, it has a volume of 78.4 cubic metersIf you mean 28 square meters (like a pool 4 meters by 7 meters) then the volume one tenth of a meter deep is 2.8 cubic meters.
An area measuring 14 x 8 x 2 feet contains: 8.296 cubic yards.
4.5 x 9 x 1.5 = 60.75 cubic feet
3.0107 cubic meters
2*2*6 = 24 cubic metres - assuming that the depth is 6 METRES and not measured in some other units.
Four cubic meters would be the equivalent of a cube-shaped volume measuring approximately 1.59 meters in each dimension. This could be visualized as a block that is 1.59 meters tall, 1.59 meters wide, and 1.59 meters deep.
2.5 meters deep
One hundred cubic metres Example a cube measures 100 metres wide and long and deep So total area is 1,000,000 cubic metres or 100m3 i.e. 100x100x100m
Area = length x width = 3 x 6 = 18 square meters, regardless of the depth Volume = area x depth = 18 x 0.5 = 9 cubic meters
360 cubic meters of salt.
One cubic meter cannot be "converted" to a square measure unless we know how "deep" it is being spread. For example, if it is one meter deep, then it would cover one square meter; but if it is two meters deep, then it would cover half that area. If it were, say, 1 cm deep, then it could cover a million square centimeters (100 x 100 x 100).