Question
A sugar cube has a volume of about 4.9 ml. What is the total volume in milliliters of 1.5×10^6 sugar cubes?(1 point)
Responses
7.35×107 ml
7.32 times 10 superscript 7 baseline ml
7.35×105 ml
7.35 times 10 superscript 5 baseline ml
0.735×107 ml
0.735 times 10 superscript 7 baseline ml
7.35×10^6 ml
Responses
7.35×107 ml
7.32 times 10 superscript 7 baseline ml
7.35×105 ml
7.35 times 10 superscript 5 baseline ml
0.735×107 ml
0.735 times 10 superscript 7 baseline ml
7.35×10^6 ml
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
To find the total volume of \(1.5 \times 10^6\) sugar cubes, we can multiply the volume of a single sugar cube (4.9 ml) by the number of sugar cubes.
1. **Volume of one sugar cube**: 4.9 ml
2. **Number of sugar cubes**: \(1.5 \times 10^6\)
Now, let's calculate:
\[
\text{Total volume} = \text{Number of cubes} \times \text{Volume of one cube}
\]
\[
\text{Total volume} = (1.5 \times 10^6) \times 4.9
\]
Calculating \(1.5 \times 4.9\):
\[
1.5 \times 4.9 = 7.35
\]
Next, we take into account the power of 10:
\[
\text{Total volume} = 7.35 \times 10^6 \text{ ml}
\]
So, the total volume is \(7.35 \times 10^6\) ml.
Thus, the correct response is:
**7.35×10^6 ml**
1. **Volume of one sugar cube**: 4.9 ml
2. **Number of sugar cubes**: \(1.5 \times 10^6\)
Now, let's calculate:
\[
\text{Total volume} = \text{Number of cubes} \times \text{Volume of one cube}
\]
\[
\text{Total volume} = (1.5 \times 10^6) \times 4.9
\]
Calculating \(1.5 \times 4.9\):
\[
1.5 \times 4.9 = 7.35
\]
Next, we take into account the power of 10:
\[
\text{Total volume} = 7.35 \times 10^6 \text{ ml}
\]
So, the total volume is \(7.35 \times 10^6\) ml.
Thus, the correct response is:
**7.35×10^6 ml**