VOLUME
Review: How can you calculate the amount of space occupied by each box? 2 cm 5 cm 4 cm 2.8 cm 5 cm 4.5 cm 5.3 cm 3 cm 5 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm 1 cm = 1 cm 3
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm A 4 cm × 2 cm × 5 cm box occupies 40 cm 3 of space.
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm A 4 cm × 2 cm × 5 cm box occupies 40 cm 3 of space. Its volume is 40 cm 3
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm A 4 cm × 2 cm × 5 cm box occupies 40 cm 3 of space. Its volume is 40 cm 3
2 cm 5 cm 4 cm 40 of these A 4 cm × 2 cm × 5 cm box occupies 40 cm 3 of space. Its volume is 40 cm 3
40 cm 3
2.524 cm You should be able to determine the volume of any regular shape. What is the volume of this cylinder?
If this cylinder is hollow, and you fill it up with water, what volume of water do you need to fill it up?
What volume of water would there be if you filled it up as shown in the illustration?
Filling it up to this mark gives you 50 cm 3 of water.
What volume of water is this?
30 cm 3
What volume of water is this?
70 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 30 cm 3 50 cm 3
70 cm 3 50 cm 3 30 cm 3
The markings, or graduations, on the side of a container, can tell you the volume of a liquid filled to that mark.
This is a graduated cylinder, which measures the volume of a liquid