If you cannot estimate the height then, unless it is a very specific shape, you cannot calculate the volume.
It can easily be measured by using a protractor and measuring the angle between the ground and the top of the tree. You need to know exactly how far you are from the tree. Then you can use trigonometry to calculate the height of the tree. Tan (angle in degrees) = height of tree / distance from tree
Formula for working out height of a tree is (distance from eye to base of tree/distance from eye to base of stick) x length of stick = tree height.(distance from eye to base of tree/distance from eye to base of stick) x length of stick = tree height is the formula for working out height of a tree.
tree x width x height divided by 3
Volume is a tree dimensional measurement consisting of length, width, and height multiplied together. A circle is a two dimensional figure. As two dimensional figures have a height of zero their volume will also be zero. l x w x 0 = 0 A circle is a flat object existing entirely in one plane. All planar objects, regardless of shape have zero volume. They can have area, just no volume.
You might calculate the volume of the main trunk, approximating it by the formula of a cylinder. You might add some of the bigger branches, by the same method, if you want more accuracy. Then you multiply the volume you obtain, by an assumed density - use the value of water or a little less.
It can easily be measured by using a protractor and measuring the angle between the ground and the top of the tree. You need to know exactly how far you are from the tree. Then you can use trigonometry to calculate the height of the tree. Tan (angle in degrees) = height of tree / distance from tree
Check this out! http://stackoverflow.com/questions/575772/the-best-way-to-calculate-the-height-in-a-binary-search-tree-balancing-an-avl
mathematical triangulation. Measure a set distance from the tree, determine the angle from a horizontal plane to the tip of the tree, and that should allow you to calculate the height of the tree.
A cubic foot is a measure of volume, not of length or height.
The biggest tree, by volume, is the General Sherman, a Giant Sequioa, Sequioadendron giganteum.By height it is the 379ft Coast Redwood, Sequioa sempervirens.
The tallest tree is known to be Hime-bara-momi, which is a large evergreen tree with greyish brown thick fissured bar. It is believed to grow up to 40-50 meters in height.
General Sherman is the name of a Giant Sequoia with a height of 275 feet (83.8 metres). As of 2002, the volume of its trunk measured about 1487 cubic meters, making it the largest non-clonal tree by volume.
it can grow upto 400ft in height
Your question doesn't make sense :) If what you mean is how to find the volume of a tree, then we can do that by recognizing the tree as a cylinder. To approximate the volume of a tree, we can use the equation V = πr^2h where r is radius, and h is height. For example: A tree trunk has a height of 8 ft and a radius of 3 ft, plugging this in we get π3^28, which equals 226.16 ft ³. To find the relative volume of the entire tree with its branches, we could treat each branch as a cone. Represented by the equation *πr^2+πrl for each branch, we can take the average height and radius of the cones to get a very rough total tree area. For the final example calculation... The image of my very well drawn shape tree shows 9 total cones, with a cylinder trunk. The trunk measures 28 feet high with a 4 foot radius. The cones for the sake of frightening simplicity measure a 1 foot radius, averaging 15 feet high, with an approximate slant height of 15 feet. Now with this information given and pretty unrealistic branch dimensions, we can solve for ultimate tree volume: Trunk volume: π4^228 = 1407.43 ft ³ Unit branch volume: *π1^2+π115 = 50.37 ft ³ Total branch volume: 50.37 * 9 = 453.33 ft ³ _____ Grand total: 453.33 + 1407.43 = 1860.76 ft ³ And there you have it, total approximate tree volume. Obviously this is really poor math, and the final total is really not that impressive. So no, tree it's not short nor long volume, it is...it's...wait what were you trying to ask anyways??!?
The height of a tree is dependent on the variety of tree. The tallest growing trees are the coast redwoods, also known as the Sequoia. The widest tree ever recorded was a European Chestnut.
Formula for working out height of a tree is (distance from eye to base of tree/distance from eye to base of stick) x length of stick = tree height.(distance from eye to base of tree/distance from eye to base of stick) x length of stick = tree height is the formula for working out height of a tree.
The average height of a Joshua Tree is 17in.