It doubles The volume of a cylinder height times diameter squared times 3.14
Your diameter is double the radius. So the diameter is 6
It'll more than likely double the circumference, too. BOOM.
i think its the same since the radius is half the diameter.
Nothing - if you double the radius you will get the diameter. The area of the circle will remain the same
If the diameter doubles (x2), the cross-sectional area quadruples (x4).
You get 2 circles of diameter. If you were trying to find a perimeter, Never double the diameter. If you have a radius, You have to double it to get a perimeter.
As circumference = π x diameter and π is constant (≈ 3.14159), doubling the diameter will double the circumference.
Your diameter is double the radius. So the diameter is 6
If you double the circumference. the diameter like wise would double.
The volume is doubled.
It'll more than likely double the circumference, too. BOOM.
i think its the same since the radius is half the diameter.
Nothing - if you double the radius you will get the diameter. The area of the circle will remain the same
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.
If the diameter doubles (x2), the cross-sectional area quadruples (x4).
As the area of a circle A equals pi times the radius squared, and doubling the diameter means multiplying the radius by four, the area is multiplied by 16 when you double the diameter.
Force=Area*PSI Area=Pi*R^2 Hope this helps For a double-acting cylinder: pi/4(d1^2-d2^2)y where: d1 = diameter of bore d2 = diameter of rod y = psi of system