Wiki User
∙ 12y agoUnfortunately, the question does not state whether the diameter is 8 metres or 8 micrometres or some measure in between the two.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoH = D sin ( ((2*pi*V.k)/V.t) - pi/2) + D Here: D = Diameter of the cylinder V.k = The known volume of the liquid V.t = The total volume of the cylinder H = The height of the liquid.
Measure the outer diameter of the tube and its' length. Calculate each tube volume and multiply by number of tubes. For those who want to calculate the inside liquid capacity of the shell side, it is advise to include the baffle volume with the tube bundle volume.
To calculate the volume of liquid in the pipe, we need to first calculate the cross-sectional area of the pipe using the formula for the area of a circle (Area = π * (radius)^2) with the radius being half of the diameter. Then, we can multiply the cross-sectional area by the length of the pipe to find the volume. Finally, convert the volume from cubic feet to gallons if needed.
First, calculate the radius. It is half the diameter. Then, to calculate the volume, use the formula: Volume = 4/3 x pi x radius3. Pi is approximately 3.1416.
The equatorial diameter is approximately 49,528 kilometers. The volume is 6.254 X 10 to the 13th squared, or about 57.74 Earths.
The volume of a very small needle can be determined by measuring its dimensions (length, diameter) and calculating its volume using mathematical formulas for the shape of the needle (cylinder, cone, etc.). Alternatively, the needle can be immersed in a known volume of liquid and the displacement of the liquid can be used to calculate the volume of the needle.
Height and diameter will give you the volume, if you know the density you can then calculate weight from that.
Pi x diameter x height.
Volume = Height * Area of Circle Area of Circle = pi*(Diameter/2)^2 Height = Diameter Volume = Diameter*(pi*(Diameter/2)^2) Volume = (pi/4)*Diameter^3 Diameter = (4/pi) * Volume ^ (1/3) Diameter = (4/3.14)*220^(1/3) ≈ 6.54 cm
The diameter of the moon is about 3474.8 kilometers. The volume of a sphere is equal to 4/3 (pi)(radius cubed). This gives it a volume of approximately 2.1958 E10 cubic kilometers.
The mass of Mercury is 3.3022 E23 kilograms, and its volume is 6.083 E10 cubic kilometers. It's average diameter is 4879 kilometers.
Derive from measurements of length, breadth, height, radius, diameter etc. Measure the volume of displaced liquid when the object is submerged. If the object is of a material of known density (or specific gravity), weigh it and calculate volume from volume = mass/density.