All you can say is ( for example) for an area of 7 cm2, that "the volume is 7 cm3 per cm height".
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.
The answer depends on what information you are given: volume and height, or surface area and height, etc.
Make the height the subject of the fornula for the volume or surface area of the cylinder
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.
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)