pi*radius2*height = volume Make the height the subject of the above formula:- height = volume/pi*radius2
volume = length*height*width Rearrange the formula: length = volume/height*width
height*length*width = volume Divide both sides by length*width to find the height: height = volume divided by length*width
The formula for volume is length x width x height = volume. So if you take the volume and divide it by the length and width it should give you the height.
height has to be given. or volume. volume of a cylinder is v = (pi r ^2) h or diameter times height.
It doubles it.
If the other dimensions (length and height) are left unchanged, doubling the width will double the volume.
Doubling the radius quadruples the volume.
Yes - of course it is !
They both have the same effect on the surface area of the pipe, but the radius has more effect on its volume/capacity.
Radius
the volume changes as radius squared and linear with height, so tripling radius and double of height gives 3 x 3 x 2 = 18 times more volume
Doubling the mass of an object would not directly affect its height. The object's height is primarily determined by its initial position and any external forces acting on it, such as gravity. However, a significant increase in mass may lead to changes in how the object interacts with its environment, such as impacting its ability to be lifted or pushed to a higher position.
It is supposed to. I did it on my children and it worked
The volume increases by 8 times (23). doubling is 2, so its 2 to the power of 3. Leigh
Yes. Except that there will be some combinations of changes to diameter and height which will leave the volume unchanged.
No, you can do it by doubling their HEIGHT when they are 2, not their weight. And yes it is considered to be approximately accurate.