Solving Cube & Sphere Geometry Problem - Help Needed

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The problem involves determining how many complete unit cubes are contained within a sphere inscribed in a larger cube with a 6 cm edge. The sphere has a diameter of 6 cm, making its radius 3 cm. To solve the problem, one approach is to analyze the distance from the furthest corner of each unit cube to the center of the sphere, focusing on a subset of cubes due to symmetry. After eliminating those on the surface of the larger cube, it is concluded that only 7 unit cubes fit entirely within the sphere. The final answer is 56 complete unit cubes contained in the sphere.
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I am having difficulty solving the following problem:

"A cube of edge 6 cm is divided into 216 unit cubes by planes parallel to the faces of the cube. A sphere of diameter 6 cm is inscribed in the large cube so that the faces of this cube are tangent to the sphere. What is the number of complete unit cubes contained in the sphere?"

Anyone care to point me in the right direction?
 
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try doing it for a 6 unit square and 6 unit diameter circle first. maybe that will help.
 
Hmmm, no replies...is the question really that hard? Or are you not helping me because you think it is homework? If that's the case, you're wrong. I'm just doing the problem out of interest.

So, please, please help me :frown: .
 
It's not hard, it's just not that interesting for me cos it's fiddly.

here's a long winded way to do it:

for each cube, pick the furthest corner from the centre of the sphere, find the length from that corner to the centre of the sphere - not too hard, and see if its less than the radius of the sphere. by symmetry you only need to do it for something like 27 cubes. and clearly none on the surface of the larger cube will work, and that's 19 of the 27 got rid of straight away. of the remaining 8, only one, the furthest from the centre needs any consideration, really, and as sqrt 12 > 3 its furthest corner lies outside the sphere,

so the answer appears to be 7*8=56


that do you?
 
Here is a little puzzle from the book 100 Geometric Games by Pierre Berloquin. The side of a small square is one meter long and the side of a larger square one and a half meters long. One vertex of the large square is at the center of the small square. The side of the large square cuts two sides of the small square into one- third parts and two-thirds parts. What is the area where the squares overlap?

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