The volume increases by a factor of four.
Doubling the radius quadruples the volume.
volume=pi*radius squared*height/3, where radius is the radius of the cylinder (and will be the radius of the base of the cone),and height is the lenth of the cylinder.
The volume of a cylinder that has a radius of 6 and a height of 8 is: 226.2 units3
The volume of a cylinder with a radius of 6 and a height of 1 is: 113 cubic units.
A cylinder with a radius of 3 units and a height of 8 units has a volume of 226.195 cubic units.
Doubling the radius quadruples the volume.
The volume of a circular cylinder varies directly with the height of the cylinder and with the square of the cylinder's radius If the height is halved and the radius is doubled then the volume will be increased.
i think its the same since the radius is half the diameter.
If the volume of the cylinder is 5, then its volume is 5 and its radius doesn't matter.
Double its height or increase its radius by a factor of sqrt(2) = 1.4142 (approx) or some combination of changes to he height and radius.
V = (pi)*R2*H if you double the radius then put 2R in place of R in the formula: V = (pi)*(2R)2*H V = 4pi*R2*H So the volume will increase 4 fold if you double the cylinder's radius.
A cylinder with a radius of 4cm and a height of 2cm has a volume of 100.53cm3
The volume of a cylinder that has a radius of 3cm and a height of 7cm is 197.92cm3
volume=pi*radius squared*height/3, where radius is the radius of the cylinder (and will be the radius of the base of the cone),and height is the lenth of the cylinder.
Pi * Radius * Radius * Height.
The volume of a cylinder is (pi)r^2h. This means the volume is dependent on both the height and the radius of the cylinder. So, one must know Volume and either radius or height to calculate height or radius respectively.
Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius squared*height