The base of a cylinder is the circle on the bottom, the area being the area of that circle.
The area of a cylinder = 2πr2 + 2πrh, where π is pi (3.14159...), r is the radius of the top and bottom, and h is the height. Click on the related link below for a tutorial on how to find the area of a cylinder.
To find the area of a rod, you need to know its shape. If the rod is cylindrical, you can calculate the surface area using the formula for the lateral surface area of a cylinder: 2πr * h, where r is the radius and h is the height of the cylinder. If the rod has a different shape, you will need to use the appropriate formula for that shape to find its area.
you look at the area of the top and bottom which is 2x pi r^2 where r is the radius and you add 2x pi x r x h where h is the height. The second part is the surface area of the "sides" of the cylinder.
(h is the height of the cylinder, r is the radius of the top)Surface Area = Areas of top and bottom +Area of the sideSurface Area = 2(Area of top) + (perimeter of top)* heightSurface Area = 2(pi r 2) + (2 pi r)* hcredit to:http://www.math.com/tables/geometry/surfareas.htm#cylinder
1. Find the surface area of the whole cylinder 2. Find the area of one of the two circles on either end of the cylinder 3. Multiply the circle's area by two and subtract their area from the total surface area 4. Now you have the surface area of an unclosed cylinder!
The surface area of a cylinder is 2πrh + 2πr². The variable r is the radius and h is the height.2πr² is the area of the top and bottom parts of the cylinder.2πrh is the area of the round circular part.
They can usually be found on side of frame, the top of barrel, the bottom of the butt, and inside the frame of cylinder area.
A cylinder has no edges, but it has three different faces (top, bottom, and middle area)
The area for the base of a cylinder is the area of a circle. pi times radius squared.
To find the volume of the cylinder, multiply the height of it by the area of its base (its bottom). The volume of a cylinder is expressed as V = h(pi r^2). If you want to find an approximate volume for the substance in the cylinder, multiply the height of the substance by the base of the cylinder. Again, V = h(pi r^2).
You Find the Hieght of the cylinder