The surface area of an object is the combined area of all of the faces on its surface. All 6 faces of a cube are identical, so to find the surface area of a cube, all you have to do is find the surface area of one face of the cube and then multiply it by 6. We chatted with pro math tutor David Jia to explain how to find the surface area of a cube if you know either the length of one side or the volume of the cube, as well as how to understand cubes and surface area better.
Surface Area of a Cube Formula
The formula for finding the surface area of a cube is 6s 2 , or 6 times the surface area of one face of the cube. The surface area of one face equals the length of one face s of the cube squared. Then, multiply this by 6, since a cube has 6 identical faces.
Steps
Calculating Surface Area with the Length of One Side
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Start with the equation 6s 2 . This is the equation for the surface area of a cube. S stands for “side,” or the length of one side of a cube. To find the total surface area of a cube, we need to know the area of one of the square faces of the cube first. To find the area of a square, multiplying the length times the width (since the 4 sides of a square are equal, the length and width are the same number).
- Once we know the area of a single face of the cube, all we need to do is multiply that value by 6, since a cube has 6 faces.
- So, just find the area of once face of the cube, then multiply that by 6! That’s all this equation really means.
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Multiply the length and width of one face of the cube. First, we find the area of one face of the cube. Every face of a cube is a square. The area of a square is length times width , and length and width are always the same on a square. So all we need to do is square the measurement we’re given ( s ), which means multiply it times itself. [1] X Research source
- For example, if we’re told that one edge, or side, of a cube is 4 cm, then we find the area of one face of the cube by multiplying 4 cm x 4 cm, which is 16 cm 2 .
- In other words, s 2 = (4 cm) 2 = 4 cm x 4 cm = 16 cm 2
- Our units are squared ( 2 ) because we’re also multiplying the unit by itself. Centimeters x centimeters = centimeters 2 .
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Multiply the area of one face of the cube by 6. Now that you've found the area of one face of the cube, all you have to do to find the surface area is multiply this number by 6, since a cube has 6 identical faces. 16 cm 2 x 6 = 96 cm 2 . The surface area of the cube in this example is 96 cm 2 .
Calculating the Surface Area with the Volume
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Start with the equation Volume = s 3 . The volume of a cube is length x width x height . Since it’s a cube, the length, width, and height are all the same value, so really we’re just multiplying one number ( s , or "side") by itself 3 times, or “cubing” it. If we already know the volume of a cube, we can use this information to work backward and find the surface area. [2] X Research source
- For example, let's say that the volume of the cube we’re working with is 125 cm 3 .
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Find the cube root of the volume. To find the cube root of the volume, we’ll need to factor the primes of the volume. To do this, look for a number that can be multiplied by itself 3 times to equal the volume. You may need to use a calculator, and keep in mind that the number won't always be a whole number. Finding the cube root will tell us the length of one side of the cube, which we can use to easily calculate surface area.
- In this case, the cube root of 125 is 5, since 5 x 5 x 5 = 5 3 = 125. So, s , or the length of one side of our cube, is 5 cm.
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Plug this answer into the formula for the surface area of a cube. Now that you know the length of one side of a cube, just plug it into the formula for finding the surface area of a cube: 6s 2 . Since the length of one side is 5 cm, just plug it into the formula like this:
- 6 x (5 cm) 2
- 6 x (5 cm x 5 cm)
- 6 x 25 cm 2 = 150 cm 2 .
Community Q&A
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QuestionWhat if the cube has different lengths -- for example 3 cm, 4 cm and 3 cm?Community AnswerAll cubes have equal sides. If they aren't equal, they are call rectangular prisms.
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QuestionHow do I find the total surface area of a cube whose volume is 3?DonaganTop AnswererYou would have to refer to a table that gives cube roots, because the formula for finding the surface area of this cube is six times the cube root of 9.
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QuestionHow do I find the volume of the cube if I only know the surface area?DonaganTop AnswererDivide the surface area by 6. That gives you the area of one side. Find the square root of that area. That gives you the length of one edge. Cube that number. That's the volume (in cubic units).
Video
Tips
References
- ↑ https://math.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Arithmetic_and_Basic_Math/Basic_Math_(Grade_6)/01%3A_Area_and_Surface_Area/06%3A_Squares_and_Cubes/6.02%3A_Surface_Area_of_a_Cube
- ↑ https://math.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Arithmetic_and_Basic_Math/Basic_Math_(Grade_6)/01%3A_Area_and_Surface_Area/06%3A_Squares_and_Cubes/6.02%3A_Surface_Area_of_a_Cube
- ↑ https://flexbooks.ck12.org/cbook/ck-12-cbse-math-class-9/section/13.6/primary/lesson/surface-area-of-a-cube/
About This Article
To find the surface area of a cube, use the formula: surface area = 6s^2, where s is the length of one of the sides. If you don't know the length of the sides, you can find the surface area using volume. Just find the cube root of the volume, which is equal to the length of one side of the cube. Then, plug that number into the formula for finding the surface area. For examples you can work through, read on!
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