Volume of a sphere = 4/3 x pi x radius3; (4/3) x 3.1416 x (10 inches)3 = (4/3) x 3.1416 x 1,000 cubic inches = 4,188.8 cubic inches
You can find the volume of a sphere by V = (4/3)*pi*r3 where r is the radius of the sphere. So in your case, the volume would be approximately 57.90583579 m3
Your measurements are not those of a sphere. The 12 inches and 6 inches are OK, but if it's a sphere, its height would equal the diameter and be equal to 12 inches. Please repost your question and change either the height or the word, "Sphere".
the volume of a sphere is 4/3 (pi) r^3, so if r= 9 then volume would be approximately 3053.63m
The volume would be 1436.7550...cm^3 and so on.
A cylinder with a radius of 21 inches and a height of 98 inches has a volume of 135,773.35 cubic inches. This cylinder would have a volume of 587.763 US gallons.
You can find the volume of a sphere by V = (4/3)*pi*r3 where r is the radius of the sphere. So in your case, the volume would be approximately 57.90583579 m3
Your measurements are not those of a sphere. The 12 inches and 6 inches are OK, but if it's a sphere, its height would equal the diameter and be equal to 12 inches. Please repost your question and change either the height or the word, "Sphere".
The volume would be (500pi)/3 since the formula for a sphere is (4r3pi)/3, when radius=r The volume is exactly 523.598776 cubic meters.
the volume of a sphere is 4/3 (pi) r^3, so if r= 9 then volume would be approximately 3053.63m
The volume would be 1436.7550...cm^3 and so on.
A cylinder with a radius of 21 inches and a height of 98 inches has a volume of 135,773.35 cubic inches. This cylinder would have a volume of 587.763 US gallons.
Volume of a sphere is 4/3 * pi * r cubed. Radius being 5 feet you would do:(4 / 3) * pi * 125 = 523.598776 feet, which in metric would be 159.592907 metres.
A general algorithm for the calculation of the volume of a sphere would begin with accepting the input for the radius or diameter of the sphere. Once this variable is obtained, it can be sent to a function that uses 4/3 * (pi) * (radius cubed) to determine the final output.
The volume of a sphere is given by the formula V = 4/3(pi)R^3. So a sphere of radius 4 meters would have a volume of 4/3(pi)(4^3) = 256(pi)/3, or approximately 268 cubic meters.
There is no equation for the "scale factor" of a sphere. If I assume you to mean how the volume increases with radius then you would use the volume equation for a sphere and calculate volume based on corresponding radii. You could then divide the resultant volumes to give a percentage or factor of how much larger or small one sphere is than another. You'll see that a small change in radius causes a large change in volume due to the volume being a cubic factor of the radius.
That depends. What is that "square root of 354" ? Is it the circumference ? Diameter ? Area of the circle ? Area of the sphere ? Volume of the sphere ? The radius is different for each one.
To find the volume of a sphere with a known diameter or radius (which is half the diameter), use the following formula: Asphere = 4/3 pi r3 pi = 3.14 and r = radius For a balloon with a diameter of 12 inches, the radius is 6 inches. Taking that information to the formula, you'll get 25.133 cubic inches (in3).