At first my friend, you haven't stated of what kind of body are you looking to find the radius.
That will depend on its height which has not been given but the volume of a cylinder is pi*radius squared*height.
What is the radius of a sphere is given by the formula r 0.7 5V 13 .that has a volume of 32 3 cubic meters where V is its volume. Find the radius of a spherical tank
Given a sphere of radius r, Surface area = 4{pi}r2 Volume = (4/3){pi}r3
Density = mass/ volume volume= 4/3(pie)(r^3) ***r= radius in meters** so find volume then divide mass by volume and there you go.
Vol = 4/3*pi*r3 so given the volume, you can calculate the radius. Height of sphere = 2*radius.
V = 4/3(PI*r3)
To find the radius of the aluminum sphere, you need to know its density. Without density information, it's not possible to calculate the radius just from the mass given.
The change in volume of an object due to temperature change is given by the coefficient of volume expansion (α), which for aluminum is about 0.000023 per degree Celsius. Given the initial temperature change from 0 to 100 degrees Celsius, the total change in volume can be calculated using the formula: ΔV = V * α * ΔT, where V is the initial volume, α is the coefficient of volume expansion, and ΔT is the change in temperature. Substituting the values, you can find the change in volume of the aluminum sphere.
The volume of a sphere is 4/3 Pi x radius cubed. So given V you multiply the volume by 3/4 and divide by Pi, then take the cube root of that entire quantity and you have the radius.
The volume of a cylinder is given by the equation V=2*pi*r*h V=volume r=radius h=height Since the height and volume are given in this case, rearranging the equation will show that r= V / (2*pi*h). With that equation you can find the radius of any cylinder with known volume and height.
If you are referring to a cylinder, the volume is given by the equation: V = pi * r^2 * h where pi = 3.14159265.........., r = radius and h = height