atmosphere
You can find the volume of a sphere by V = (4/3)*pi*r3 where r is the radius of the sphere. So in your case, the volume would be approximately 57.90583579 m3
the volume of a sphere is 4/3 (pi) r^3, so if r= 9 then volume would be approximately 3053.63m
The volume would be 1436.7550...cm^3 and so on.
You cannot convert a sphere into square metres unless you want the surface area of the sphere. The volume of a sphere would be measured in cubic metres. You would need to be more specific about exactly what you want to know.
The volume of a sphere V = ⁴⁄₃πr³ would be near enough.
This sphere would have a diameter of 3.368 units with a volume of 020 units3
You can find the volume of a sphere by V = (4/3)*pi*r3 where r is the radius of the sphere. So in your case, the volume would be approximately 57.90583579 m3
the volume of a sphere is 4/3 (pi) r^3, so if r= 9 then volume would be approximately 3053.63m
The sphere's volume is 0.5236 cubic yards. This volume contains 105.8 gallons of water. Since one gallon of water weighs about 8.34 pounds, the total weight would be about 882.4 pounds.
The volume would be (500pi)/3 since the formula for a sphere is (4r3pi)/3, when radius=r The volume is exactly 523.598776 cubic meters.
Density = Mass/Volume, whatever the shape. So, if the masses are the same, the density is greater when the volume id smaller. Thus the sphere, with the smaller volume has the greater density.
The volume would be 1436.7550...cm^3 and so on.
I calculated the volume of the sphere to be 10 in^3.
Yes it would.
You cannot convert a sphere into square metres unless you want the surface area of the sphere. The volume of a sphere would be measured in cubic metres. You would need to be more specific about exactly what you want to know.
Volume of the sphere: 4/3*pi*2^3 = 33.5 cubic meters to one decimal place
The volume of a sphere V = ⁴⁄₃πr³ would be near enough.