There is no direct relationship between the two. The ratio depends on the relative measures.
The answer will depend on what aspect the formula is for: the surface area or the volume being the most obvious options.
Surface area is squared; volume is cubed.
A surface area would be vital for determining volume
The two nets of a regular right triangular prism are surface area and volume.
triangular prism- formula: Abh(area of the base * height)
The answer will depend on what aspect the formula is for: the surface area or the volume being the most obvious options.
Surface area is squared; volume is cubed.
A surface area would be vital for determining volume
The two nets of a regular right triangular prism are surface area and volume.
a triangular prism is different from a rectangular prism because: their names are different a triangular prism has a triangle for its' base a rectangular prism has a rectangle base a triangular prism has less sides than a rectangular prism a rectangular prism has more sides than a triangular prism
triangular prism- formula: Abh(area of the base * height)
the defnition of find the surface area of triangular prism and cylinder
The answer depends on what measure - volume, surface area - equals 375.
If you triplied the height of a triangular prism, would that triple it volume
No. Relative to its volume, the greater the number of sides, the smaller the volume. In the limit, a cylinder (circular prism, with an infinite number of "sides") will have the least surface area.
Find the surface area of the top or bottom face and multiply that by the depth of the prism. For example, a triangular prism would have a volume of (1/2 * base * height) * (depth)
"triangular" is an adjective - it is not enough to define a shape. You can have a triangular pyramid or a triangular prism and there will be different methods to calculate their volumes.