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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_surface_area_from_the_volume

How do you find the surface area from the volume? - Answers

You would have to specify the shape for which we are finding these quantities. But let us say that it is a cube, which is the easiest. The length of an edge of the cube, multiplied by itself gives the area of a face, and multiplied by itself again gives the volume. So the cube root of the volume is the edge length, and then the square of the edge length is the surface area of one face of the cube, which multiplied by 6 gives the area of the entire cube.



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How do you find the surface area from the volume? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_surface_area_from_the_volume

You would have to specify the shape for which we are finding these quantities. But let us say that it is a cube, which is the easiest. The length of an edge of the cube, multiplied by itself gives the area of a face, and multiplied by itself again gives the volume. So the cube root of the volume is the edge length, and then the square of the edge length is the surface area of one face of the cube, which multiplied by 6 gives the area of the entire cube.



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_you_find_the_surface_area_from_the_volume

How do you find the surface area from the volume? - Answers

You would have to specify the shape for which we are finding these quantities. But let us say that it is a cube, which is the easiest. The length of an edge of the cube, multiplied by itself gives the area of a face, and multiplied by itself again gives the volume. So the cube root of the volume is the edge length, and then the square of the edge length is the surface area of one face of the cube, which multiplied by 6 gives the area of the entire cube.

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      You would have to specify the shape for which we are finding these quantities. But let us say that it is a cube, which is the easiest. The length of an edge of the cube, multiplied by itself gives the area of a face, and multiplied by itself again gives the volume. So the cube root of the volume is the edge length, and then the square of the edge length is the surface area of one face of the cube, which multiplied by 6 gives the area of the entire cube.
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