The surface are of a right prism is equal to twice the area of its base plus the perimeter of the base multiplied with the height of the prism. The volume can be determined by multiplying the Area of the base by the height of the prism.
Base x height
volume=area of the cross section x the length
B- 12.03 in.
The volume of any right prism is the area of the base, in this case a trapezoid, multiplied by the height of the prism. The formula for the area of a trapezoid is A = 1/2h(a + b) where a and b are the bases of the trapezoid (the parallel sides). Once you calculate the area of the trapezoidal base of the prism, multiply that number by its height to get its volume.
Yes.
The surface are of a right prism is equal to twice the area of its base plus the perimeter of the base multiplied with the height of the prism. The volume can be determined by multiplying the Area of the base by the height of the prism.
The volume of the pyramid and cone is one third the volume of the corresponding (ie same [size] base and height) prism and cylinder.
Base x height
Volume = Base Area times height
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)
Divide the base area into its volume
Volume of a right prism: Area of Base times Height. Volume of a cube: Vertex cubed. Volume of a rectangular prism: Length times Width times Depth.
Do you mean, what is the volume of a (right) triangular prism? Multiply the area of one end by the length of the prism.
volume=area of the cross section x the length
The two nets of a regular right triangular prism are surface area and volume.
You will have to work the surface area of one of the ends and then multiply that with the length.