A sugar cube has a volume of about 4.9 ml. What is the total volume in milliliters of 1.5×106 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

7.35×106 ml

To find the total volume of 1.5×10^6 sugar cubes, we multiply the volume of one sugar cube (4.9 ml) by the number of sugar cubes.

Total volume = (4.9 ml/cube) * (1.5 × 10^6 cubes)
Total volume = 7.35 × 10^6 ml

Therefore, the correct answer is 7.35×10^6 ml.

To find the total volume of 1.5×10^6 sugar cubes, you need to multiply the volume of one sugar cube (4.9 ml) by the number of sugar cubes (1.5×10^6).

Calculating this:

4.9 ml × 1.5×10^6 = 7.35×10^6 ml

So, the total volume in milliliters of 1.5×10^6 sugar cubes is 7.35×10^6 ml.

To find the total volume of 1.5×10^6 sugar cubes, you need to multiply the volume of one sugar cube by the number of sugar cubes.

The volume of one sugar cube is given as 4.9 ml.
The number of sugar cubes is given as 1.5×10^6.

To calculate the total volume, multiply the volume of one sugar cube by the number of sugar cubes:

Total volume = Volume per sugar cube × Number of sugar cubes

Total volume = 4.9 ml × 1.5×10^6

To multiply a number by 10 raised to a power, you add that power to the exponent of the number:

Total volume = 4.9 × 10^0 ml × 1.5 × 10^6

When multiplying numbers in scientific notation, you add the exponents and multiply the coefficients:

Total volume = (4.9 × 1.5) × (10^0 × 10^6) ml

Total volume = 7.35 × 10^6 ml

Therefore, the total volume of 1.5×10^6 sugar cubes is 7.35×10^6 ml.