It is 1 times greater. Note: the question is not about how many times as great.
To find the volume of a small pebble using a measuring cylinder, you would first fill the measuring cylinder with a known amount of water. Next, carefully drop the pebble into the water and measure the new water level. The difference between the initial and final water levels represents the volume of the pebble displaced, which is equal to the volume of the pebble itself.
No, a cylinder with radius ( r ) and height ( h ) will not have the same volume as a rectangular prism with side ( r ) and height ( h ). The volume of the cylinder is calculated using the formula ( V = \pi r^2 h ), while the volume of the rectangular prism is ( V = r^2 h ). Since ( \pi ) is approximately 3.14, the cylinder's volume will be greater than that of the rectangular prism.
The volume of a cylinder that has a radius of 6 and a height of 8 is: 226.2 units3
The volume of a cylinder with a radius of 6 and a height of 1 is: 113 cubic units.
The volume will be doubled.
The volume is doubled.
It doubles The volume of a cylinder height times diameter squared times 3.14
Yes - of course it is !
The volume of a circular cylinder varies directly with the height of the cylinder and with the square of the cylinder's radius If the height is halved and the radius is doubled then the volume will be increased.
Double its height or increase its radius by a factor of sqrt(2) = 1.4142 (approx) or some combination of changes to he height and radius.
Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height
pi*radius2*height = volume of a cylinder height = volume divided by pi*radius2
To find the volume of a small pebble using a measuring cylinder, you would first fill the measuring cylinder with a known amount of water. Next, carefully drop the pebble into the water and measure the new water level. The difference between the initial and final water levels represents the volume of the pebble displaced, which is equal to the volume of the pebble itself.
That will depend on its height because volume of the cylinder = pi*radius2*height
No, a cylinder with radius ( r ) and height ( h ) will not have the same volume as a rectangular prism with side ( r ) and height ( h ). The volume of the cylinder is calculated using the formula ( V = \pi r^2 h ), while the volume of the rectangular prism is ( V = r^2 h ). Since ( \pi ) is approximately 3.14, the cylinder's volume will be greater than that of the rectangular prism.
Changing the radius.
Volume of a cylinder = base area times height