The surface area of a cylinder can be found using the following formula - SA = 2(Pi*r2) + (2*Pi*r)*(H) Pi = Approximately 3.14 r = Radius of the base of the cylinder H = Height of the cylinder
Perimeter = area + b1 + b2 + c P = a + b1 + b2 + c
2 x pi x r
L + d1/d1+d2 x w
force over area=pressure
The formula for finding area or mass of a cylinder is pi x radius^2density=massxvolume
L.A.= 2*pi*radius*height its not like finding the area of a rectangle. a cylinder is a 3-D shape and a rectangle is a flat shape
archimedes
V= AxH where A is the area of the circle, and H is the height of the cylinder.
Area=Bh when B=area of the base, and h=height of the prism/cylinder
the area for a cylinder is the area of the cirlce face X length of the object. (Pi)r2X length
2πrh, where 'r' is the radius and 'h' is the height.
You can use them when finding surface area or volume You can use a formula for a cylinder when finding the area of a cylinder. This is that formula: Areas of top and bottom circles + Area of the side 2(pi x radius2) + 2 x pi x radius x height
The surface area of a cylinder can be found using the following formula - SA = 2(Pi*r2) + (2*Pi*r)*(H) Pi = Approximately 3.14 r = Radius of the base of the cylinder H = Height of the cylinder
No because the formula for finding the area of an oval, which is an ellipse, is quite different
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and height, or surface area and height, etc.
Area of a circle = (pi)r2 [Areacircle = pi time the radius squared.] Volume of a cylinder = (pi)r2h [Volumecylinder = pi times the radius squared times the height.] (This applies to a right circular cylinder. :)