A sphere volume = 4/3 pi r cubed
Volume
i need the height dude what is the height?
Kilogram is weight, not volume.
volume of spherical = 4/3*Pi*Radius^3 = 4/3*3.14*32^3=137188
The answer depends on whether or not the tank has a geometric shape. If it has a shape that can be broken up into simply geometric shapes, each with a volume formula, you can calculate the volume of each section and add them together. Obviously that will not work with a random shape. In that case, you can fill the tank to capacity and then empty it out into measuring jars or flasks. Use the volume of the jars to calculate the volume of the tank.
Volume
To calculate the volume of a spherical tank, you can use the formula ( V = \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3 ), where ( r ) is the radius. Given a diameter of 25 centimeters, the radius is 12.5 centimeters. Plugging this into the formula gives ( V = \frac{4}{3} \pi (12.5)^3 ), which equals approximately 654.24 cubic centimeters.
i need the height dude what is the height?
Kilogram is weight, not volume.
volume of spherical = 4/3*Pi*Radius^3 = 4/3*3.14*32^3=137188
A liter is a measure of volume; we need to calculate the volume of the tank. For this we need to have all three measurements of the tank.
To calculate the tank's volume, you would have to multiply its dimensions together. In this case, it will be 18 x 12 x 30, which is 6480 units cubed
To calculate the weight of gasoline in a tank, you would need to know the volume of gasoline in the tank and its density. Multiply the volume by the density to get the weight. The density of gasoline can vary depending on factors such as temperature and composition.
Volume = Cross sectional Area x Height.
The answer depends on whether or not the tank has a geometric shape. If it has a shape that can be broken up into simply geometric shapes, each with a volume formula, you can calculate the volume of each section and add them together. Obviously that will not work with a random shape. In that case, you can fill the tank to capacity and then empty it out into measuring jars or flasks. Use the volume of the jars to calculate the volume of the tank.
Density = mass / volume since earth is nearly spherical, Volume = (4/3)pi x r3 find volume, then divide this into the mass.
diamater 1300 x Hight 1800. what is the volume in litres