d = 14.3
For a cylinder with those dimensions, the volume is (pi) x (Radius2) x (Length), and the Radius is 1/2 of the diameter.
The volume is 127,235 cm3
Well, isn't that just a happy little question! To find the diameter of a cylinder when you know the circumference, you can use the formula: diameter = circumference / π. So, for a circumference of 45 centimeters, the diameter would be 45 / π ≈ 14.32 centimeters. Just remember, there are no mistakes, just happy little accidents in math!
The cylinder's diameter will be about 32.58m
the width of the cylinder
Formula for volume of a cylinder is πr^2 * h So the radius of the cylinder is 6-2=3, 3^2= 9*5=45*π So the answer is 45π or 141.372
The bore of a cylinder describes is measurement, in millimeters or inches, of the inside diameter of the cylinder. The diameter is the width across.
If you have a physical cylinder to measure, measure the "width" of the circle that is the cross section of the cylinder. That is the diameter, Half the diameter is the radius.
The diameter, alone, is not enough to find the volume of a cylinder. You need the height as well. > Where pi = 3.1416, and d = cylinder diameter cylinder volume = pi * (d/2)2 * length of cylinder
It depends what you know. The top of a cylinder is in the shape of a circle. So, to find the diameter of the cylinder (which is also the diameter of the circle), if you know the radius, just multiply it by two.
External diameter minus internal diameter will get you the difference and then you have to divide by two to get the wall thickness. (as the difference in diameter accounts for both sides of the cylinder)
The diameter of 45 centimeters is simply 45 centimeters. The diameter is the straight line that passes through the center of a circle, connecting two points on its circumference. Therefore, if you measure across the circle and it spans 45 centimeters, that is its diameter.