Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height
It is not possible if you only know the radius. A cylinder with a radius of 8 inches could be any height.
One way to figure this out is to put the object in a graduated cylinder containing water and measuring the changes in the volume of the water.
If you know the Volume and the Height of the prism, then you can divide the volume by the height to get the base area. B=V/H If you know the side lengths of the base then you could simply multiply them together to get the base area.
A graduated cylinder may be used for small objects that are insoluble in a selected liquid. But that method would not work for determining the volume of a sugar cube (soluble in water) or a motor car (won't fit in a graduated cylinder!).
You can't tell the dimensions from knowing the volume. The tank could be in the shape of a cube, a long skinny box, a sphere, a teardrop, a cylinder standing up with flat top and bottom, a cylinder lying down with round ends, etc., and every shape would have different dimensions for a volume of 1,000 barrels.
You cannot determine the height and diameter from just the volume because there is an almost infinite number of combinations of height and diameter that could create a particular volume.
It could be any positive number of centimeters. The volume depends not only on the radius, but also on the height of the cylinder.
it can be found by first taking the volume of the water itself and then the volume of the object in the water. you pour water into the 12-sided object, then measure the amount of water using the graduated cylinder. Then you do this: length x width x height = volume
You cannot. The cylinder could be a large squat shape, or a thin tube which could be as long as you want. The volume of a cylinder does not determine its shape.
There are an infinite number of cylinders that hold one gallon. The volume of a cylinder is a function of its height as well as its diameter. If you double the height, you double its capacity. If you double the radius, you quadruple the capacity. So, you could have a very tall, thin cylinder or a short, wide one.
The radius of a cylinder given only the height could be anything you like.
The amount of a liquid that is displaced by a solid = the volume of that solid. You could half fill a graduated cylinder. Drop something that sinks into the graduated cylinder to test its volume.
it can be found by first taking the volume of the water itself and then the volume of the object in the water. you pour water into the 12-sided object, then measure the amount of water using the graduated cylinder. Then you do this: length x width x height = volume
Length times width times height = volume or Volume could be the intensity of sound.
It is not possible if you only know the radius. A cylinder with a radius of 8 inches could be any height.
Any height. The size you have has the base about that of a tin of paint. But it could be any height.
It depends on the way the question is asked. If you are dealing with a cubic or rectangular object, you measure the length, width, and height, and multiply them. If it is a spherical or irregularly shaped object, you could used water displacement to find its volume. If it's a liquid, you could use a graduated cylinder to measure its volume.