Separate them into parts. First calculate the volume of the cylinder, then the cone and then add the results
A hollow truncated cone is a geometric shape that is cone-shaped. The formula to calculate the volume is s^2=h^2 + (R-r)^2.
You will also need the height of the cone. From circumference you can calculate the radius (circumf/Pi = radius). Volume of cone = 1/3 height x Pi x radius2
Capacity or volume of a cone = 1/3*pi*radius2*height measured in cubic units
You simply calculate it like a cone, but the height of the cone is the height to the top of the FILLED part, not all the way. Half-filled is not enough information . . . there can be "half filled" meaning half the height of the cone, but can also be "half filled" meaning half the volume of the cone.
To calculate the volume of an irregular cone, you can use the formula V = (1/3) * A * h, where A is the base area of the cone and h is the height of the cone. First, find the area of the base, then multiply it by the height and divide by 3 to get the volume.
Separate them into parts. First calculate the volume of the cylinder, then the cone and then add the results
You can calculate the weight of a cone by using the formula: weight = volume x density x gravitational acceleration. First, calculate the volume of the cone using the formula V = (1/3)πr^2h, where r is the radius of the base and h is the height. Then, multiply the volume by the density of the material of the cone and the acceleration due to gravity (typically 9.81 m/s^2).
A hollow truncated cone is a geometric shape that is cone-shaped. The formula to calculate the volume is s^2=h^2 + (R-r)^2.
You will also need the height of the cone. From circumference you can calculate the radius (circumf/Pi = radius). Volume of cone = 1/3 height x Pi x radius2
Capacity or volume of a cone = 1/3*pi*radius2*height measured in cubic units
You simply calculate it like a cone, but the height of the cone is the height to the top of the FILLED part, not all the way. Half-filled is not enough information . . . there can be "half filled" meaning half the height of the cone, but can also be "half filled" meaning half the volume of the cone.
To calculate the volume of the cone do like this: 3*3*pi*6/3 Pi is about 3.14 So the answer is about 56.52cm³
Assume the mountain is a cone. Now, go forth and calculate.
Calculate the volume of full cone. For this you need to reproduce the cone surface upto the point where radius becomes zero.Then deduct the volume of the portion which is cut from the full volume. You can't multiply the height to the average of bottom area and top area. Because area (pi.r^2) is the second degree function of radius, not first degree.
Take the base Radius to be R1, the top radius to be R2. Then the volume for the "cone" is V = Pi * (R12 + R1R2 + R22) * Height / 3
The simple is to calculate the volume of the cone and subtract from the result the volume of the cone whose altitude is 1/2 the altitude of the original cone. This is easier said than done. The volume of a cone with circular base is (1/3)πr2s where r is the radius of the base and s is the altitude. The radius of the base of the empty part of the cone and hence its area can be found by using the pythagorean theorem