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Dec
Class 9 - Cube & Cuboid, Class 9 - Surface areas and Volumes, Math - Class 9 | NCERTClass 9 math tutorials, cube and cuboid, curved surface area, lateral surface area, math, mathemafia, mathematics, NCERT, surface area, volume of cube, volume of cuboid
Question 7: A godown measures 40 m × 25 m × 15 m. Find the maximum number of wooden crates each measuring 1.5 m × 1.25 m × 0.5 m that can be stored in the godown.
Cube & Cuboid
Finding volume of a cube or a cuboid is quite simple. Every cube/cuboid has 6 sides. All we need is multiply the length, breadth and height to find the volume or capacity. However, there is some difference between volume and capacity of an object. This has been explained in the video embedded in the end of the post.
A cube is a cuboid that has all edges of equal length. Hence, every cube is a cuboid as well but every cuboid is not a cube.
Volume of cuboid = length * breadth * height = l * b * h
Volume of cube = a³ ( where a is any edge of the cube)
It is recommended to understand the core concept of area, surface area and volume before we attempt any question based on these concepts.
It is recommended to understand the concept of volume and capacity before you attempt any questions related to volume and capacity of cube and cuboid.
Chapter 13 – Surface areas and Volumes
Concepts
- Area / Surface area / Volume – Introduction
- Surface Area of Cube and Cuboid
- Volume Of Cuboid and Cube
- Surface Area of Right Circular Cylinder
- Volume and capacity of Cylinder
- Right circular Cone
- Surface Area of Right circular Cone
- Volume of Cylinder vs Cone
- Litres and Cubic centimetre (cm³)
- Cubic meters to litres