Find the area of the circle and multiply it by the height
I will give an example:
Radius = 10 cm and height = 15 cm
volume = Area of base x height
Area of base = area of circle = 3.142 x 10 x 10 = 314.2 cm squared
Volume = Ans. x height
=314.2 x 15
=4713 cm cubed
Good Luck and hope you got it
You can't. There are an infinite number of different combinations of radius and
height that would all have the same volume.
When given any two of the numbers ... radius, height, and volume ... you can find
the third one, using the formula for the volume of a cylinder:
Volume = (pi) x (radius)2 x (height) .
That will depend on its height which has not been given but the volume of a cylinder is pi*radius squared*height.
Since the formula for the volume of a cylinder is PI time the radius squared times the height we can calculate the height from the other two values. The height is the volume divide by PI times the radius squared.
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and height, or surface area and height, etc.
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and radius or diameter, or surface area and radius, etc.
If you are referring to a cylinder, the volume is given by the equation: V = pi * r^2 * h where pi = 3.14159265.........., r = radius and h = height
That will depend on its height which has not been given but the volume of a cylinder is pi*radius squared*height.
Since the formula for the volume of a cylinder is PI time the radius squared times the height we can calculate the height from the other two values. The height is the volume divide by PI times the radius squared.
The volume of a cylinder, V, is given by the formula:V = pi*r^2*h where r is the radius and h is the height of the cylinder. It is necessary to know both the radius and the height before you can determine the volume.
The radius IS given, since height of hemisphere = radius of hemisphere!
The volume of a cylinder is given by the equation V=2*pi*r*h V=volume r=radius h=height Since the height and volume are given in this case, rearranging the equation will show that r= V / (2*pi*h). With that equation you can find the radius of any cylinder with known volume and height.
That depends on its height which has not been given
Volume of Cylinder = Pi x radius2 x height Therefore for a cylinder with a radius of 7 units and a height of 6 units is given by Volume = 3.14 x 72 x 6 = 923.16 (cubic units)
Volume of Cylinder = Pi x radius2 x height Therefore for a cylinder with a radius of 5 units and a height of 7 units is given by Volume = 3.14 x 52 x 7 = 549.5 (cubic units)
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and height, or surface area and height, etc.
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and radius or diameter, or surface area and radius, etc.
If you are referring to a cylinder, the volume is given by the equation: V = pi * r^2 * h where pi = 3.14159265.........., r = radius and h = height
The radius of a cylinder given only the height could be anything you like.