The answer is Compression Ratio. You should try reading the Study Unit it really helps!
Curved surface area includes the area of the length of the cylinder only whereas surface area includes the two bases as well...
face or surface are related words for a surface area of a cylinder
An open cylinder has zero volume. Its surface area is 4(pi)rL, wherein r is the radius of the cylinder and L is the length. A closed cylinder has a volume of L(pi)r^2. (That is, L times pi times r-squared.) Its surface area is 2(pi)rL + 2(pi)r^2.
if the cylinder is on the inside, it would not affect the surface area. otherwise, subtract the part of the inside cylinder that touches the outside from the cylinder
no
Curved surface area includes the area of the length of the cylinder only whereas surface area includes the two bases as well...
consider a cylinder..SA is the whole area of the surface of the cylinder including the circles at the two ends..while LSA is only the area of surface of walls excluding the two circles..
face or surface are related words for a surface area of a cylinder
The surface area of this cylinder is 376.99ft2
An open cylinder has zero volume. Its surface area is 4(pi)rL, wherein r is the radius of the cylinder and L is the length. A closed cylinder has a volume of L(pi)r^2. (That is, L times pi times r-squared.) Its surface area is 2(pi)rL + 2(pi)r^2.
if the cylinder is on the inside, it would not affect the surface area. otherwise, subtract the part of the inside cylinder that touches the outside from the cylinder
no
A cylinder has an outer surface and an inner surface. If cut from top to base and flattened out, it still has two surfaces.
A cylinder has 2 equal parallel flat surface circular bases and a curved surface body.
The surface area is 747.7cm2
This cylinder's surface area is 980.21 units2
The relationship between the surface areas of cylinders, cones, and spheres is that the surface area of a cylinder is equal to the sum of the areas of its two circular bases and its curved surface area, the surface area of a cone is equal to the sum of the area of its circular base and its curved surface area, and the surface area of a sphere is equal to four times the area of its circular base.