The depth is the same as the height
It would be a wooden cube that has been cut in half and painted red.
A uniform cube would have its minimum rotational inertia about an axis passing through its center of mass and perpendicular to any face of the cube.
The density of the cube is calculated by dividing the mass of the cube by the volume of the cube. The volume of a cube is given by the formula side length cubed, so the density of the cube would be mass (g) divided by side length (cm) cubed.
An aluminum cube would weigh less in water than in air. This is because water exerts an upward buoyant force on objects submerged in it, which partially offsets the downward force of gravity acting on the cube.
The relative density of a plastic cube is the ratio of the density of the plastic cube to the density of water. To calculate it, you would divide the density of the plastic cube by the density of water (usually 1 g/cm^3). If the relative density is less than 1, the cube will float in water, and if it's greater than 1, the cube will sink.
You find the area of one side (base x height) and then multiply that by the depth of the cube.
Yes, because it has depth.
That one, there!
A relationship that has "depth"?
if the volume of a cube = 15, the side = cube root (volume) = cube root (15) = 2.466
Volume: l times w times depth
A cube has equal width, depth and height, so in this case the volume would be 2 x 2 x 2 (or 23) = 8 cubic cm (or cm3)
A book is shaped like a cuboid. It has a different measurement of length x width x depth. (If a shape had length x width x depth of the same measurement, it would be a cube.)
something wiht three dimensoins... its not flat it has depth
The volume of a cube is referred to as cubic volume. It is found by multiplying the length, width, and depth together.
The volume of a cube is width times depth times height and all sides are equal because it is a cube, therefore the volume is (4C) cubed or 64 (C)cubed.
Multiply the length/depth/height and your product will be in cubic inches. That is the volume.