Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height
Volume = 5301.437603 or 5301.438 cubic inches to 3 d.p.
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This is a clever problem. It sounds really complicated, but that's only becauseit's actually two simple problems rolled into one.The two problems are:1). Volume of a rectangular prism2). Volume of a cylinderBefore we get started, let's make sure you remember the formulas for both ofthose volumes:1). Rectangular prism . . . V = (length) x (width) x (height)2). Cylinder . . . Volume = (pi) x (radius)2 x (height)The attack is:-- Figure out the volume of the water that rained onto the roof.-- Realize that the same volume poured into the cylindrical tub.-- Figure out how deep that much water fills the cylinder.At this point, the hard part is done! The problem is as good as solved.-- 1.2 cm of rain falls on the 10m x 5.5m rectangular roof. How much water is sitting on the roof ?Volume = L x W x H = (10m) x (5.5m) x (0.012 m) = 0.66 cubic meter of water-- Now pour that water into the cylinder with 3m diameter. How deep is it ?Volume = (pi) x (radius)2 x (height) .We need to find the height, so solve this formula for the height.Divide each side of equation by (pi) x (radius)2 :Height = Volume / (pi) x (radius)2The volume is the 0.66 m3 that poured off of the roof.The radius is 1/2 of the diameter = 1.5m .So Height = (0.66)/(pi) x (1.5)2 = 0.09337 meter = 9.337 cm.
In order to find the volume of the cylinder more information is required as to the actual dimensions of the cylinder. Volume is calculated by knowing the radius and height of the cylinder.
You need three dimensions to calculate the volume: Width, Length, and Height. Multiple the three dimensions together to find the volume then multiply by 7.481 (gallons of water per cubic foot). HINT: Be sure and convert yards to feet before multiplying. +++ More +++ Given that the tank is cylindrical, the 2 yards wide would be the diameter. The Area must be multiplied by the height to find the volume. Area for Diameter is A = Pi x R-squared where Pi is 3.1416 and R is Radius. The Radius is half of the diameter, hence a diameter of 6 ft (2 yds) would have a radius of 3 ft. Use the formula to find the Area: 3.1416 x (3x3) = 3.1416 x 9 = 28.2744 sq ft. Next multiply the area by the height to find the volume: 28.2744 x 15 = 424.116 cu ft. Next multiply the volume by number of gallons per cubic foot (7.481): 424.116 x 7.481 = 3,172.8117 gallons capacity (assuming the dimensions given are inside dimensions).
multiply it Length- Width - Height , or measure the volume of a container of water then stick the object in and measure the volume of the object+water then subtract the volume of the water then you have the volume
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Volume of water = (pi) x (Radius of the well)2 x (depth of the water)
The height of this quantity of water would be exactly that much!
Can not be done without the 'Given' radius and height.
volume = area * height = Pi * Radius^2 * height = Pi * 4 *1 = 12.6m^3 of water = 12600 L
i need the height dude what is the height?
you need to use the formula for volume which is V = πr2h, where r is the radius of the tank and h is the height.
Is this a rectangular tank or a circular (cylindrical) or an ellipsoid tank? If rectangular: 30 * 12 * 8 = 2880 cubic feet If cylindrical which dimension is the diameter? V = PI * r2 *h Where PI is 3,14159...; r2 is the radius (half the diameter) squared; h is the height
The volume of the tank is about 31809 cubic feet of water. The volume of a cylinder is V = pi r2 x h where pi = about 3.1416, r is the radius, and h is the height (3.1416)x (152) x (45) = (3.1416) x 225 x 45 = about 31808.7 cubic feet
Volume = Area of cross section x height
Volume = pi * radius^2 * height
V = Pi x radius squared x height