The numbers you've listed are the 'dimensions'. The 'volume' is what you're looking for.
186-m x 0.4-m x 0.2-m = 14.88 m3. That's the 'volume'.
You need to know the height of the pool to answer. Liquid is measured in volume, 3 dimensions (m3)
The density of the substance is calculated by dividing the mass (5 kg) by the volume (43 m3). Therefore, the density of the substance is 5 kg / 43 m3 ≈ 0.1163 kg/m3.
Using Charles's Law (V1/T1 = V2/T2), we can find the new volume: V2 = (V1 * T2) / T1 V2 = (0.1 * 315) / 300 V2 = 0.105 m3 Therefore, the new volume of the balloon would be 0.105 m3.
The base unit of volume is liter. (L)My honors Physics teacher told us that the base unit of Volume is cubic meter (m3)literThe liter is a unit of volume, but it is only tolerated, it is not part of SI.The basic unit of volume in SI is the metric cube (m3).1 m3 = 1 000 L
1 liter = 1,000 cc ---> 10 liters = 10,000 cc1 kg = 1,000 grams ---> 5 kg = 5,000 gramsdensity = (mass) / (volume) = 5,000/10,000 = 0.5gram/cc
The volume of the cube is 2.53 m3 = 15.625 m3
volume = mass ÷ density. 1 tonne = 1000 kg The volume depends upon the density of the clay which will vary with how wet it is. Dry clay has a density of 1600 kg/m3 → volume = 1000 kg ÷ 1600 kg/m3 = 0.625 m3 Wet clay has a density of 1760 kg/m3 → volume = 1000 kg ÷ 1760 kg/m3 ≈ 0.568 m3 Which means the volume of 1 tonne of clay will be in the range of approx 0.568 m3 to 0.625 m3
123 m3 is 1.23 x 10-7 km3
you
Volume
There are , its m3
It all depends upon the density of the substance. For 1 Kg of Mercury, with a density of 13534 Kg/m3 it will occupy a volume of about 0.0000739 m3. For 1 Kg of Hydrogen with a density of 0.0899 kg/m3 it will occupy a volume of about 11.12 m3.
m3 is a cubic meter. It is the volume equivalent of a cube 1 meter wide by 1 meter deep by 1 meter tall. 1 m3 is equivalent to 1000 liters.
Density (kg/m3) = mass(kg)/volume(m3)= 0.386/20x10-3 = 19.333333....kg/m3
According to the EPA, the interior volume of the 2003 BMW M3 is 84.4 cu.ft..
According to the EPA, the interior volume of the 2011 BMW M3 is 104.6 cu.ft..
According to the EPA, the interior volume of the 2013 BMW M3 is 99.6 cu.ft..