Stage 6 · Powers, Roots & Real Numbers

6.3  Cubes and Cube Roots

Lift the square idea into three dimensions — and watch how signs behave differently.

For ages 12–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 4 in this lesson: 6.3.1 Cubing and the volume of a cube

6.3.1 Cubing and the volume of a cube

A square is built from one length used twice: side times side. A cube — the solid, the dice-shaped block — is built from one length used three times: edge × edge × edge. If the edge is a, that triple product is written a3 and read aloud as "a cubed" or "the cube of a." The little raised 3 is an exponent, exactly as in Lesson 6.1; here it counts three equal factors.

The word and the solid are the same idea. We call a3 "a cubed" precisely because it measures the volume of a cube whose edge is a. Picture filling that box with unit cubes — tiny 1×1×1 blocks. A cube of edge 2 holds 23 = 2×2×2 = 8 of them: two layers, four cubes per layer. A cube of edge 3 holds 33 = 3×3×3 = 27: three layers, nine per layer.

The edge sets the volume: 2³ = 8 unit cubes on the left, 3³ = 27 on the right. Each step up the edge adds a whole new slab of little cubes.

Notice how fast the volume climbs. Going from edge 2 to edge 3 is just one more unit of length, yet the count of unit cubes leaps from 8 to 27 — more than triples. That steep growth is the signature of a third power, and it is worth feeling in your hands with the widget below.

Worked example

Find the volume of a cube of edge 4 cm. We cube the edge: 43 = 4×4×4. Group it: 4×4 = 16, then 16×4 = 64. So the volume is 64 cubic centimeters. The first five perfect cubes are worth knowing cold: 1, 8, 27, 64, 125 — that is 1³, 2³, 3³, 4³, 5³.

Watch out

Cubing is not "times 3." A common slip is to write 5³ = 15. But 5³ means 5×5×5 = 125, not 5+5+5 and not 5×3. The exponent 3 tells you how many factors to multiply, not a number to multiply by.

🎮 Try itGrow the cube, count the unit cubes

Step the edge from 1 to 5 and watch the volume a³ — the number of unit cubes — build up layer by layer.

Edge a 3
eastmath.com · 6.3 Cubes and Cube Roots · 6.3.1 Cubing and the volume of a cube