Make the height the subject of the fornula for the volume or surface area of the cylinder
Not enough information. The volume is the base area times the height; the height is therefore the volume divided by the base area.
By dividing its cross-section area into its volume
Find the area of the base and divide by the volume and that should give you the height.
All you can say is ( for example) for an area of 7 cm2, that "the volume is 7 cm3 per cm height".
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and height, or surface area and height, etc.
The volume of a cylinder is found by multiplying the area of its base times its height.
Not enough information. The volume is the base area times the height; the height is therefore the volume divided by the base area.
By dividing its cross-section area into its volume
Find the area of the base and divide by the volume and that should give you the height.
All you can say is ( for example) for an area of 7 cm2, that "the volume is 7 cm3 per cm height".
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and height, or surface area and height, etc.
The volume of the cylinder would be 200 x 10 = 2,000 cm3
Volume of a cylinder = base area times height
A cylinder with a surface area of 200cm2 and a height of 20cm has a volume of about 137.96cm3
First find the area of the cylinder's base, and multiply that by the height. For V = A x h. Volume, Area, height.
The area of a cylinder's base with a height of 10 and a volume of 3800 is 380 units2
Volume = (height)(area base)