the formula is
V=3.14r²
It is the length of the base of the semi-circle.
It depends on the values you have. The base of a cylinder is a circle. If you know the circle's diameter, half it to find the radius. If you know the circle's circumference, divide by 2pi to find the radius. If you know the circle's area, divide by pi and take the square root to find the radius.
the formula is V=3.14r²
If you have area of base, then who needs the volume ? The whole problem is nothing but a circle question. The base is a circle. The area of a circle is (pi R2), and you know the area. Do you think you can find 'R' now ?
cylinder's are shape's by them selves . So it means that it is impossible to find what shape it is
Pi(3.1415926) x Radius squared
The area for the base of a cylinder is the area of a circle. pi times radius squared.
It is a circle, so use the formula "pie r squared" to figure it out
Volume = Base x Height /3 Where base is the area of the base circle (pi*radius*radius) and Height is the perpendicular distance from the base to the apex of the cone
The base of a cone is always a circle. it also can be a ellipse.
This is simply the pitch circle diameter multiplied by cosine of pressure angle, which is most commonly 20 degrees.
Base X Height - pi(r)^2