Volume of sphere = 4/3*pi*r3
So volume of half a sphere = 2/3*pi*r3= 2/3*pi*103 = 2000*pi/3 = 2094.4 cubic units
2000π/3
Use this formula when the radius is known: V = 4/3(PI*r3)
5, because the radius is half the diameter and half of 10 is 5
The volume of a cylinder that has a radius of 7 inches and a height of 10 inches is: 1,539.4 cubic inches.
100 mm = 10 cm Volume of sphere = 4/3*pi*53 = 523.599 cubic cm rounded to 3 decimal places
2000π/3
The volume of a sphere with a 10 in radius is: 4,188.8 cubic inches.
The volume of a sphere that has a radius of 10 millimeters is: 4,189 mm3
The volume in liters of a sphere with a radius of 0.0043 cm is: 3.33 × 10-10 liters
4,188.8 cubic units.
1500pi
Example problem: "What is the volume of a sphere whose diameter is 10 units ?"The volume of any sphere is: V = 4/3 πR3, R is the radius of the sphere, π = 'pi' = approx. 3.14159For the given sphere, the diameter is 10 units. The radius is half the diameter = 5 units.V = 4/3 π R3 = 4/3 x (3.14159) x (5)3 = 4/3 x (3.14159) x (125) = 523.6 cubic units (rounded).
Use this formula when the radius is known: V = 4/3(PI*r3)
The formula for the volume of a sphere is 4/3 πr3, where r is the radius of the sphere. For example, for a sphere with radius 2cm, the volume is (23 x π) x 4/3 - which is equal to 10 2/3 x π, or, to two decimal places, 33.51cm2.
Volume of a sphere = 4/3 pi R3= (4/3 pi) (10-2 cm)3= 4.1888 x 10-6 cm3 (rounded)
Surface area of half a sphere = 2*pi*radius2 Surface area = 200*pi = 628.3185307 square units.
V = 4/3(pi)r3 So if the radius is 10 cm, this is 4/3(pi)(103) or about 4188 cm3