I think u measure the top draw a line to the middle of it and then like multiply it with pie or something
A graduated cylinder, and a millilitre.
Well, first of all, "meter square" is not an appropriate unit for the capacity of anything.The unit you want is "meter cubed" or m3. 1 m3 is the same as 1,000 liters.The capacity of a cylinder in m3 is . . . . (pi) x (R2) x (H) .pi = 3.142 (rounded, close enough, correct within 0.013 percent)R = the radius of the circular end of the cylinder, in metersR2 means multiply ' R ' by itselfH = the height (or length) of the cylinder, in metersIf ' R ' and ' H ' are measured in centimeters, then the capacity will be incubic centimeters, or mL (same thing). 1 liter = 1,000 cc= 1,000 mL.
Volume of a cylinder = πr²h
The capacity of a cylinder is its volume which is the area of an end times the cylinder's length (height). If the cylinder has radius r and length h, its volume (capacity) is: {pi}r2h
Towing capacity of the 4 cylinder is 1,500 pounds.
Seismograph
road speed
Formula for a cylinder is pi*radius2*height.
Capacity isn't a unit at all. It's a characteristic, or a property of an item, which can be measured in whatever suitable unit. Capacity of batteries is measured in amp hours. Capacity of a gas tank can come in either liters or gallons.
The "specific heat capacity" is simply the heat capacity per unit - it might be per mass unit, per volume unit, or per amount of moles.
an engine may have more than one cylinder. if a 4 cylinder engine has a displacement of 2.2 L, then each cylinder is 1/4 th of that or 0.55 L per cylinder.
Liter is a unit of volume (or capacity). Gram is a unit of mass.