The area of the cross section (the triangle) muliplied by the length of the prism. Area of triangle= 0.5 x base x height Then mulitply by the length the prism goes back
A triangular prism can be thought of as a stack of triangles. Then the volume is equal to the area of the triangular base multiplied by the height of the prism, or 1/2 length * width * height.
The volume of any prism is worked out in the same way whether it's a hexagonal prism, circular prism or a triangular prism. You just need to times the length of the prism against the area of the cross-section.
The volume of a three-dimensional figure is the amount of space it encloses. The volume V of a triangular prism is the product of the area B of a base and the height h of the prism. (The bases are triangles. In a special case of a right triangular prism the bases are right triangles)
The answer depends on what measurements you do have.
Mass = Density x Volume
The answer depends on what measure - volume, surface area - equals 375.
triangular prism- formula: Abh(area of the base * height)
If you triplied the height of a triangular prism, would that triple it volume
A triangular prism can be thought of as a stack of triangles. Then the volume is equal to the area of the triangular base multiplied by the height of the prism, or 1/2 length * width * height.
It depends on triangular what: pyramid, dipyramid, prism, ...
Do you mean, what is the volume of a (right) triangular prism? Multiply the area of one end by the length of the prism.
The volume of any prism is worked out in the same way whether it's a hexagonal prism, circular prism or a triangular prism. You just need to times the length of the prism against the area of the cross-section.
The volume of a three-dimensional figure is the amount of space it encloses. The volume V of a triangular prism is the product of the area B of a base and the height h of the prism. (The bases are triangles. In a special case of a right triangular prism the bases are right triangles)
You find the volume of a triangular prism by using this formula: Volume = 1/2 base of the triangle x height of the triangle x height of the prism.
Capacity generally implies volume in geometry. To calculate the volume of a triangular prism, find the area of one of its triangular bases and multiply it by the height of the shape.
Find the area of a triangular section, 1/2bh, and then multiply by the length of the prism.
To find the volume of a triangular prism, you can use the equation ( V = B \times h ), where ( V ) is the volume, ( B ) is the area of the triangular base, and ( h ) is the height of the prism (the distance between the triangular bases). The area of the triangular base can be calculated using the formula ( B = \frac{1}{2} \times b \times h_t ), where ( b ) is the base length of the triangle and ( h_t ) is the height of the triangle. Thus, the complete formula becomes ( V = \left(\frac{1}{2} \times b \times h_t\right) \times h ).