The capacity of that section of line is (pi R2 L) = 333.79 cubic feet = 2,496.95 gallons. (rounded)
We have no way of knowing how much water is actually in it. It may even be empty.
Yes. 3+2+6=11. If you divide 11 and 3, your answer is 3r2. You will have two 3 inch sides and one 5 inch side.
The answer depends on the flow rate or the water pressure, not just the pipe size.
Circumference is a linear measure and has no volume - just as a straight line has no volume.
For water the line has a negative slope (vs carbon dioxide). This explains why ice floats since volume decreases with increasing pressure as we move upward on the phase diagram from solid to liquid water, the volume occupied by H20 decreases and thus water must be increasing in density.
line segment to the nearest half inch is measured using the distance formula.
water line? half inch or three quarters
This problem lies with your pipe sizes. If the pipes size of your main line does not equal the supply for demand this will result in the current problem. For example, if your whole house is fed with half inch piping and you open two taps the volume of water has to be shared from the half inch pipe, thus causing a drop in pressure. Whereas if one installed three quarter inch main line "t-ing" off to half inch, because the three quarter inch will hold a higher volume of water when two taps are opened and the water shared, the drop in pressure will be hardly noticeable.
-- If the wood has sunk ... such as teak, ebony, or mahogany ... then its volume is 0.525 L. -- If the wood is floating, then the portion under the water line has a volume of 0.525 L, and the portion above the water line has volume that we can't state with the information given.
the average home water line size is 1/2 inch to fixtures
A beaker of water. Fill the beaker to a certain point, put the fossil in the water and see how many ml the water goes up to. The difference between the original fill line and the fill line after dropping the fossil in is the volume in ml.
Dishwasher line is hot water. Tie ice maker into 1/2 inch cold line going to kitchen sink.
A one inch line.
The length of a 4-inch line is 4-inches.
about an inch below the TOP of the filter...there should be a line on your filter...
Yes. 3+2+6=11. If you divide 11 and 3, your answer is 3r2. You will have two 3 inch sides and one 5 inch side.
Fill the object with water and pour it out into a graduated cylinder. This will give you the volume of any shaped container. If you want to find its displacement the opposite is needed. A tank of water. The water line is marked. The object is submerged and eureka you mark how high the water goes. Remove the object and measure how much water you have to add to the tank to reach the new line. That would be the displacement of your object. It is about the same as its' internal volume.
The answer depends on the flow rate or the water pressure, not just the pipe size.