you cannot ... unless you want to use advanced geometrical calclus
Your diameter is double the radius. So the diameter is 6
A cylinder with a radius of 10mm and a height of 15mm has a volume of 4,712.39mm3
Easy, you find the area of the circle (Pi X Radius squared) and then multiply it by the height. Your question asks about using the diameter...the radius is half of the diameter.
The lateral area of a cylinder whose diameter is 4cm and whose height is three times the radius equals approximately 75.4cm2
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and radius or diameter, or surface area and radius, etc.
Your diameter is double the radius. So the diameter is 6
Volume of the cylinder: pi*radius*radius*height
If you have the radius and the height in feet, you can calculate the volume as:V = pi x radius squared x height (If you have the diameter of the cylinder, the radius is one-half the diameter.)
A cylinder with a radius of 10mm and a height of 15mm has a volume of 4,712.39mm3
The radius IS given, since height of hemisphere = radius of hemisphere!
Easy, you find the area of the circle (Pi X Radius squared) and then multiply it by the height. Your question asks about using the diameter...the radius is half of the diameter.
The question cannot be answered. There is no information on what aspect of the cylinder is 14 cm: the radius, diameter, circumference, height.
The lateral area of a cylinder whose diameter is 4cm and whose height is three times the radius equals approximately 75.4cm2
A cylinder with a radius of 6 inches and a height of 8 inches has a volume of 904.78 cubic inches.
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and radius or diameter, or surface area and radius, etc.
A cylinder with a radius of 9.5 yards and a height of 2.2 yards has a volume of 623.76 cubic yards.
The answer will depend on which of the two measures is the height of the cylinder and which is the diameter or radius.