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∙ 13y ago376.8 cubic centimeters15 cm * 8 cm * 3.14 cm = 376.8 cubic cm.
1/8 cm3
15m³
A cord of wood measures 8 x 4 x 4 (128 cubic ft.) A face cord varies tremendously in volume, but assuming it is 8 ft. long, 4 ft. high and about 12 in. wide: a face cord of wood is roughly 43 cubic feet. Bundles of wood vary as well, ranging from .9 cubic ft. to 1.5 cubic ft. You do the math.
3 measurements are needed to calculate volume. IF your room has an 8 ft ceiling then it is approximately 800 cu ft.
No. Here are some counterexamples:The cubic root of 0 is 0.The cubic root of 1 is 1.The cubic root of 1/8 is 1/2.The cubic root of -8 is -2.In general, the cubic root of a number will be less than the original number,Â?if your number is greater than 1.
The cube root of 8 is 2.
cubic rt(512) = 8
27X^3-8 = 0 27X^3 = 8 X^3 = 8/27 X = cubic root of 8/cubic root of 27 = 2/3
The cubic root of 8 = 2 2 * 2 * 2 = 8
cubic root of 25 is 2.924017738
Why do you people want equations solved when you present them incorrectly. You must mean............. X^3 - 8 = 0 add 8 to each side X^3 - 8 + 8 = 0 + 8 X^3 = 8 take the cubic root of each side and you should know that 2 is the cubic root of 8 X = 2
Need to factor under radical cubic root[X5} cubic root[X2 * X3] now bring out the X3 X*cubic root[X2] -----------------------
The main operation on the cubic root is finding the value of the cubic root of a number. This is commonly represented by using the symbol ∛, such as ∛x. Other related operations include estimating the value of the cubic root, solving equations involving cubic roots, and using properties of cubic roots in mathematical calculations.
That would be a number to the 6th power, like 64.
If the calculator has a power function, you can calculate your number to the power (1/3). This is equivalent to the third (cubic) root. But you can't use the square root to calculate the cubic root. If all else fails, you can try the brute-force approach, raising different numbers to the third power (multiplying the number by itself), until you find a decent approximation. For example, you want the cubic root of 6: 1 x 1 x 1 = 1, and 2 x 2 x 2 = 8, so the cubic root of 6 is between 1 and 2.If the calculator has a power function, you can calculate your number to the power (1/3). This is equivalent to the third (cubic) root. But you can't use the square root to calculate the cubic root. If all else fails, you can try the brute-force approach, raising different numbers to the third power (multiplying the number by itself), until you find a decent approximation. For example, you want the cubic root of 6: 1 x 1 x 1 = 1, and 2 x 2 x 2 = 8, so the cubic root of 6 is between 1 and 2.If the calculator has a power function, you can calculate your number to the power (1/3). This is equivalent to the third (cubic) root. But you can't use the square root to calculate the cubic root. If all else fails, you can try the brute-force approach, raising different numbers to the third power (multiplying the number by itself), until you find a decent approximation. For example, you want the cubic root of 6: 1 x 1 x 1 = 1, and 2 x 2 x 2 = 8, so the cubic root of 6 is between 1 and 2.If the calculator has a power function, you can calculate your number to the power (1/3). This is equivalent to the third (cubic) root. But you can't use the square root to calculate the cubic root. If all else fails, you can try the brute-force approach, raising different numbers to the third power (multiplying the number by itself), until you find a decent approximation. For example, you want the cubic root of 6: 1 x 1 x 1 = 1, and 2 x 2 x 2 = 8, so the cubic root of 6 is between 1 and 2.
The cubic root of 10 is an irrational number, as 10 is not a perfect cube. The only rational cubic roots are those of perfect cubes. These numbers include:1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, 512, 729, 1000, etc.