pie*r2*h
find the volume of the pool find the volume of one gallon in whatever unit you are using. divide pool volume by gallon volume
A round swimming pool is a right circular cylinder, so you can use the formula pi times the radius squared times the height to calculate the volume.
If the circumference of the round pool is 29 feet, then the volume of the pool (area times depth) is about 267.7 cubic feet.
It depends on the size of the swimming pool. First, figure out how big your cup is (the max volume it can hold) then how big your pool is (max volume of the pool). Divide the volume of the pool by the volume of the cup. That will be your answer. Ex: the cup's volume is 8 cm cubed and the pool's volume is 8000 cm cubed.dived 8000 cm3 by 8 cm3:8000/8 = 1000Therefore, the answer to this example is that there are 1000 cups of water in the swimming pool.
Assuming the pool is 4 feet deep, a 15ft round pool would have a volume of approximately 17.6 cubic meters of water. This calculation is based on the formula for the volume of a cylinder (V=πr^2h) using the radius of the pool (7.5ft) and its depth (4ft).
Depth x Diameter-squared x 5.9 = Volume in Gallons
A 20 foot round pool has a radius of 3.2 feet. So the pool has a volume of pi*r2*h = 101.86 cubic ft approx.
To determine the weight of a 24-foot aluminum round swimming pool, we need to calculate the volume of the pool first. The formula to calculate the volume of a cylinder (which the pool resembles) is V = πr^2h, where r is the radius of the pool (half of the diameter) and h is the height (which would be the depth of the pool). Once we have the volume, we can multiply it by the density of aluminum (2.7 g/cm^3) to find the weight in grams. Finally, we can convert the weight from grams to pounds if needed.
70 cm3
About 235 pounds. To figure that, find the volume of the pool in gallons (pi X radius squared X height) and multiply the answer by the approximate weight of a gallon of water (8.3 pounds). Hope that helps.
Here is a start. 1000 gal = 133.680 cubic feet/ for volume of a round pool...... remember Pi, 3.14?
We need a THIRD figure to calculate volume