Wouldn't a circle-based pyramid look a lot like a cone ? If so,
you could probably use the formula for the volume of a cone
and get away with it.
Go ask that guy
You have to find out the area of the base which you find out with perpendicular height times base then time that by the perpendicular height of the pyramid and divide it by 3
circle does not have volume
Volume of a pyramid = 1/3*base area*height
Your roof is a square based pyramid.
To find the perpendicular height of a square pyramid, first compute for the volume of the pyramid. Then divide the volume by the area of the base to find pyramid's height.
Go ask that guy
Volume of a squared based pyramid: 1/3*base area*height
You have to find out the area of the base which you find out with perpendicular height times base then time that by the perpendicular height of the pyramid and divide it by 3
circle does not have volume
Volume of a pyramid = 1/3*base area*height
The formula to find the volume of a triangular pyramid is: 1/3 (1/2 B H ) H
Your roof is a square based pyramid.
There is none because a circle has no volume but the area of a circle is pi*radius^2
circumference is the perimeter of a circle. a circle is 2 dimensional. volume is 3 dimensional. you need to state what shape it is. I could guess that you are talking about a cylinder. the volume is pi.r2.h, if you find the radius from the volume, you can find the perimeter of the circle by 2.pi.r
Radius is the name for half the diameter of a circle. A pyramid is not associated with a circle therefore it cannot have a radius. The closest shape would be a cone.
You don't.