volume = length*height*width Rearrange the formula: length = volume/height*width
the formula for the volume of a cuboid is quite simple,it is length multiply by width multiply by height.That's all.
You would have a difficult time finding a formula to prove that statement, for two main reasons: 1). The statement is false. A triangle is never a rhombus. 2). Formulas can describe things, but they can't 'prove' things.
Volume of a sphere = 4/3*pi*radius3 and legend has it that Archimedes was having a bath when he discovered the formula
Just insert the radius into the formula for the volume a sphere, and do the calculations. The formula is: V = (4/3) pi radius3
A rhombus has four equal sides and its diagonals bisect each other at right angles. The area of the rhombus ia given by following formula where x and y are the lengths of the diagonals of the rhombus...A=1/2xy. Example, the diagonals of a rhombus where x = 26 and y = 14....A=1/2xy...=1/2 x 26 x 14 which equals 182. so the area of the rhombus is 182 square inches, miles or whatever measurement you are dealing with the 3d annaloge to a rhombus is the rhomboid, the formula to fin dteh volume of that is A . (B x C).
The volume of a rhombic dodecahedron, with sides of length a, isV = 16/9*sqrt(3)*a^3 = approx 3.0792*a^3
There is no general formula to "work out" a rhombus. It all depends on the information that you have and the information that you require.
sick
Perimeter of a rhombus = 4 x (length of one side)(Notice how closely the formula resemblesthe one for the perimeter of a square.)
There is no specific "formula." If you want the area of a rhombus, that is just A = bh/2 or (1/2)xy where x and y are the lengths of the diagonals.
Any formula for the height of a rhombus will depend on the information that you do have. Without that, all that can be said is that, if the sides of the rhombus are x units, then 0 < h < x where the height is h units. If h = 0 then the rhombus degenerates into a flat line, while at h = x it becomes a square.
1/2 d1 d2
All the 4 sides of a rhombus are equal, so 4 times the length of a side.
There is no formula for this. You have to measure the volume.
ring volume formula ring volume formula
ring volume formula ring volume formula