Asst_3_UnitsofVolumeMeasure

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Your solution, attempt at solution. If you are unable to attempt a solution, give a phrase-by-

phrase interpretation of the problem along with a statement of what you do or do not

understand about it. This response should be given, based on the work you did in completing

the assignment, before you look at the given solution.

004. Units of volume measure

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Question: `q001. There are 10 questions and 5 summary questions in this assignment.

How many cubic centimeters of fluid would require to fill a cubic container 10 cm on a side?

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Your solution:

10cm^3 = 10cm * 10cm * 10cm = 1000cm^3

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aThe volume of the container is 10 cm * 10 cm * 10 cm = 1000 cm^3. So it would take 1000

cubic centimeters of fluid to fill the container.

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Question: `q002. How many cubes each 10 cm on a side would it take to build a solid cube

one meter on a side?

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Your solution:

1m = 100cm

100cm / 10 cm = 10 cm

10cm^3 = 1000 of the 10cm cubes are required.

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aIt takes ten 10 cm cubes laid side by side to make a row 1 meter long or a tower 1 meter

high. It should therefore be clear that the large cube could be built using 10 layers, each

consisting of 10 rows of 10 small cubes. This would require 10 * 10 * 10 = 1000 of the smaller

cubes.

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Question: `q003. How many square tiles each one meter on each side would it take to cover a

square one km on the side?

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Your solution:

1km^2= 1000m * 1000m = 1000000m^2 or 1.0 * 10^6 meters^2

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aIt takes 1000 meters to make a kilometer (km). To cover a square 1 km on a side would take

1000 rows each with 1000 such tiles to cover 1 square km. It therefore would take 1000 *

1000 = 1,000,000 squares each 1 m on a side to cover a square one km on a side.

We can also calculate this formally. Since 1 km = 1000 meters, a square km is (1 km)^2 =

(1000 m)^2 = 1,000,000 m^2.

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Question: `q004. How many cubic centimeters are there in a liter?

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Your solution:

1cm^3 = 1mL

1000mL = 1L

1000cm^3 = 1L

1000cm^3 in one liter

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aA liter is the volume of a cube 10 cm on a side. Such a cube has volume 10 cm * 10 cm * 10

cm = 1000 cm^3. There are thus 1000 cubic centimeters in a liter.

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Question: `q005. How many liters are there in a cubic meter?

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Your solution:

1meter^3 = 100cm * 100cm* 100cm =1,000,000cm^3

1mL = 1cm^3

1,000,000mL = 1,000,000cm^3

1L=1000mL

1,000,000mL / 1000 = 1,000L in a cubic meter

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aA liter is the volume of a cube 10 cm on a side. It would take 10 layers each of 10 rows each

of 10 such cubes to fill a cube 1 meter on a side. There are thus 10 * 10 * 10 = 1000 liters in a

cubic meter.

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Question: `q006. How many cm^3 are there in a cubic meter?

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Your solution:

1m = 100cm

1m^3 = 100cm *100cm*100cm =1,000,000 cm^3

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aThere are 1000 cm^3 in a liter and 1000 liters in a m^3, so there are 1000 * 1000 =

1,000,000 cm^3 in a m^3.

It's important to understand the 'chain' of units in the previous problem, from cm^3 to liters to

m^3. However another way to get the desired result is also important:

There are 100 cm in a meter, so 1 m^3 = (1 m)^3 = (100 cm)^3 = 1,000,000 cm^3.

STUDENT COMMENT

It took me a while to decipher this one out, but I finally connected the liters to cm^3 and m^3. I

should have calculated it by just converting units, it would have been easier.

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

The point isn't just conversion. There are two points to understanding the picture. One is economy

of memory: it's easier to remember the picture than the conversion factors, which can easily be

confused. The other is conceptual/visual: the picture gives you a deeper understanding of the

units.

In the long run it's easier to remember that a liter is a 10-cm cube, and a cubic meter is a 100-

cm cube.

Once you get this image in your mind, it's obvious how 10 layers of 10 rows of 10 one-cm

cubes forms a liter, and 10 layers of 10 rows of 10 one-liter cubes forms a cubic meter.

Once you understand this, rather than having a meaningless conversion number you have a

picture that not only gives you the conversion, but can be used to visualize the meanings of the

units and how they are applied to a variety of problems and situations.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

I used an easier conversion of for me to remember, 1m=100cm. I know from chemistry that 1

cm^3 = 1mL and from the problems here can see that 1L =1000cm^3. I can see how a mental

visualization of cubes can assist with this as well.

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Question: `q007. If a liter of water has a mass of 1 kg the what is the mass of a cubic meter of

water?

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Your solution:

1 m^3 = 1000L

1000L = 1000kg

1000L = 1 m^3, so the mass of 1m^3 = 1000kg

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

Since there are 1000 liters in a cubic meter, the mass of a cubic meter of water will be 1000

kg. This is a little over a ton.

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Question: `q008. What is the mass of a cubic km of water?

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Your solution:

1 m^3 = 1000L = 1000kg

1km^3 = 1000m^3

1km^3 = 1000kg * 1000kg * 1000kg = 1,000,000,000kg

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aA cubic meter of water has a mass of 1000 kg. A cubic km is (1000 m)^3 = 1,000,000,000

m^3, so a cubic km will have a mass of 1,000,000,000 m^3 * 1000 kg / m^3 =

1,000,000,000,000 kg.

In scientific notation we would say that 1 m^3 has a mass of 10^3 kg, a cubic km is (10^3 m)^3

= 10^9 m^3, so a cubic km has mass (10^9 m^3) * 1000 kg / m^3 = 10^12 kg.

STUDENT QUESTION

I don’t understand why you multiplied the 1,000,000,000 m^3 by 1000 km/m^3. I also don’t

understand where the (1000m)^3 came from. I thought I had this problem but it stumped me. It

is probably something really simple that I am missing. ???

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

A km is 1000 meters, but a cubic km is a cube 1000 meters on a side. It would take 1000 m^3

just to make a single row of 1-m cubes 1000 meters long, and you would hardly have begun

constructing a cubic kilometer. You would need 1000 such rows just to cover a 1-km square 1

meter deep, and 1000 equal layers to build a cube 1 km high.

Each layer would require 1000 * 1000 cubic meters, and 1000 layers would require 1000

times this many 1-meter cubes.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

I still having difficulty seeing that if 1000m^3 is equal to 1000kg why the resulting mass is 1.0 x

10^4 instead of 1.0 x 10^4? If we are visualizing meters cubed and each meter cubed has a

mass of 1000kg wouldn't km^3 be equal to 1000m * 1000m * 1000m????

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Question: `q009. If each of 5 billion people drink two liters of water per day then how long

would it take these people to drink a cubic km of water?

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Your solution:

5,000,000,000*2 = 10,000,000,000 L/day

1km^3 = 10^12kg = 10^12L

10^12L / 10^10L/day = 100days

confidence rating #$&*:

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Given Solution:

`a5 billion people drinking 2 liters per day would consume 10 billion, or 10,000,000,000, or

10^10 liters per day.

A cubic km is (10^3 m)^3 = 10^9 m^3 and each m^3 is 1000 liters, so a cubic km is 10^9 m^3

* 10^3 liters / m^3 = 10^12 liters, or 1,000,000,000,000 liters.

At 10^10 liters per day the time required to consume a cubic km would be

time to consume 1 km^3 = 10^12 liters / (10^10 liters / day) = 10^2 days, or 100 days.

This calculation could also be written out:

1,000,000,000,000 liters / (10,000,000,000 liters / day) = 100 days.

STUDENT COMMENT

There came to be too many conversions for me to keep in memory all of the conversions about

and how they work together, so I

had to write out all of the conversions next to each other and multiply them all out, even if I

could have made some

shortcuts, such as the numbers of liters in a cubic meter.

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

You can easily visualize a 1-cm cube, a 10-cm cube and a 1-m cube. You should be able to

visualize how each is built up from 1000 of the previous. If you understand the model and

make it tangible there is no need to memorize anything, and you will have a significant

measure of protections against errors with these quantities.

By understanding the meaning of the prefix 'kilo' it is easy enough to then relate these units to

the somewhat less tangible cubic kilometer.

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Question: `q010. The radius of the Earth is approximately 6400 kilometers. What is the surface

area of the Earth? If the surface of the Earth was covered to a depth of 2 km with water that

what would be the approximate volume of all this water?

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Your solution:

A=4Pi(r)^2

A(apx)= 4*3.1415(6400)^2

A(apx)=514,703,360km^2

If covered with 2km water, then volume of water is equal to the volume of (r+2) minus the

volume of r:

V(Earth)=4/3pi(6400)^3 = aprox. 1,098,066,219,000km^3

V(E+2km)= 4/3pi(6402)^3 = approx. 1,099,095,978,000km^3

V(water)=1,098,066,219,000km^3 - 1,099,095,978,000km^3 =

approx.1,029,759,257km^3

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aThe surface area would be

A = 4 pi r^2 = 4 pi ( 6400 km)^2 = 510,000,000 km^2.

A flat area of 510,000,000 km^2 covered to a depth of 2 km would indicate a volume of

V = A * h = 510,000,000 km^2 * 2 km = 1,020,000,000 km^3.

However the Earth's surface is curved, not flat. The outside of the 2 km covering of water would

have a radius 2 km greater than that of the Earth, and therefore a greater surface area. But a

difference of 2 km in 6400 km will change the area by only a fraction of one percent, so the

rounded result 1,020,000,000,000 km^3 would still be accurate.

STUDENT COMMENT

I thought that in general pi was always supposed to be expressed as pi when not asked for an

approximate value so in the

first part of the problem I didn’t calculate pi. For the second part of the question I assumed

approximate meant calculate

pi into the equation which would still be a less precise answer so I did not round any further.

???Should I have estimated

more than I did???

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

The given information says 'approximately 6400 km'.

Your result, 163,840,000pi km^2, is perfectly fine.

However most people aren't going to recognize 163,840,000 as 4 times the square of 6400

(unlike a result like 36 pi (easily enough seen as either 6^2 * pi, or 4 * 3^2 * pi)). Since the

given information is accurate to only a couple of significant figures, there's no real advantage in

the multiple-of-pi expression.

In the given solution the results are generally expressed to 2 significant figures, consistent with

the 2 significant figures in the given 6400 km radius.

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Question: `q011. Summary Question 1: How can we visualize the number of cubic centimeters in

a liter?

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Your solution:

A liter is the volume of a cube whose sides measure 10 cm.

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

Since a liter is a cube 10 cm on a side, we visualize 10 layers each of 10 rows each of 10

one-centimeter cubes, for a total of 1000 1-cm cubes. There are 1000 cubic cm in a liter.

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Question: `q012. Summary Question 2: How can we visualize the number of liters in a cubic

meter?

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Your solution:

A cube whose sides measure 1 m has a volume of 1000L.

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

Since a liter is a cube 10 cm on a side, we need 10 such cubes to span 1 meter. So we visualize

10 layers each of 10 rows each of 10 ten-centimeter cubes, for a total of 1000 10-cm cubes.

Again each 10-cm cube is a liter, so there are 1000 liters in a cubic meter.

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Question: `q013. Summary Question 3: How can we calculate the number of cubic centimeters

in a cubic meter?

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Your solution:

1 m^3 = 100^3 cm^3 or 100cm*100cm*100cm =1,000,000cm^3

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aOne way is to know that there are 1000 liters in a cubic meters, and 1000 cubic centimeters

in a cubic meter, giving us 1000 * 1000 = 1,000,000 cubic centimeters in a cubic meter.

Another is to know that it takes 100 cm to make a meter, so that a cubic meter is (100 cm)^3 =

1,000,000 cm^3.

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Question: `q014. Summary Question 4: There are 1000 meters in a kilometer. So why aren't

there 1000 cubic meters in a cubic kilometer? Or are there?

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Your solution:

1km = 1000m

1km^3 = 1000m*1000m*1000m = 1,000,000,000m^3

confidence rating #$&*:3

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Given Solution:

`aA cubic kilometer is a cube 1000 meters on a side, which would require 1000 layers each of

1000 rows each of 1000 one-meter cubes to fill. So there are 1000 * 1000 * 1000 =

1,000,000,000 cubic meters in a cubic kilometer.

Alternatively, (1 km)^3 = (10^3 m)^3 = 10^9 m^3, not 1000 m^3.

STUDENT ANSWER to question:

Because a cubic kilometer is cubed. A regular kilometer is not going to contain as much as a

cubic kilometer.

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

Kilometers and cubic kilometers don't measure the same sort of thing, so they can't be

compared at all.

Kilometers measure distance, how far it is between two points.

Cubic kilometers measure volume, how much space there is inside of something (there is space,

though not necessarily empty space, inside of any container or any 3-dimensional region,

whether it's full of other stuff or not. If it's full of other stuff then we wouldn't say that it's 'empty

space' or 'available space', but the amount of space inside is the same either way).

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Question: `q015. Explain how you have organized your knowledge of the principles illustrated

by the exercises in this assignment.

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Self-critique (if necessary):

I have constructed a conversion chart in my notebook which helped me keep this straight.

From my chemistry class learned that 1cm^3 = 1mL, I know 1000mL=L, so 1m^3=1000L is

also beneficial for conversions between L and mass as 1000L = 1000kg.

Knowing the scientific notation for all of the various SI terms is helpful for me to remember as

well.

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