Well, if length x width x height is volume, and length x width is area, then divide volume by area and you should get the dimension for height. (I think).
Not enough information. The volume is the base area times the height; the height is therefore the volume divided by the base area.
Make the height the subject of the fornula for the volume or surface area of the cylinder
Multiply the base area by the height.
All you can say is ( for example) for an area of 7 cm2, that "the volume is 7 cm3 per cm height".
Find the area of the base and divide by the volume and that should give you the height.
Using consistent units, the height = volume divided by footprint area (in the case of your rectangular box). so H = V/A
Not enough information. The volume is the base area times the height; the height is therefore the volume divided by the base area.
Make the height the subject of the fornula for the volume or surface area of the cylinder
Volume = area x height volume is 100 cm cubed height = volume/area = 100/50 = 2 cm
The volume of a cylinder is found by multiplying the area of its base times its height.
Multiply the base area by the height.
All you can say is ( for example) for an area of 7 cm2, that "the volume is 7 cm3 per cm height".
You don't. You need the height and the area of the base to find the volume.
Find the area of the base and divide by the volume and that should give you the height.
The area would be 120 inches but you need a height to get the volume The area would be 120 inches but you need a height to get the volume
Presumably it's a cone or a pyramid: 1/3*base area*height = volume Make the base area the subject of the formula: base area = (volume*3)/height
By dividing its cross-section area into its volume