Its volume is: cross-section area times its length
triangular prism- formula: Abh(area of the base * height)
To calculate the volume of a triangular prism, use the formula ( V = B \times h ), where ( V ) is the volume, ( B ) is the area of the triangular base, and ( h ) is the height (length) of the prism. First, find the area of the triangular base using the formula ( B = \frac{1}{2} \times \text{base} \times \text{height of the triangle} ). Multiply this area by the prism's height to obtain the total volume. This gives you the three-dimensional space the prism occupies.
To clarify, a triangle is a two-dimensional shape and does not have volume. However, if you're asking about the volume of a triangular prism, you can calculate it by finding the area of the triangular base and then multiplying that by the prism's height. The area of a triangle is calculated using the formula ( \text{Area} = \frac{1}{2} \times \text{base} \times \text{height} ). Finally, the volume of the prism is given by ( \text{Volume} = \text{Area of base} \times \text{height of prism} ).
Do you mean, what is the volume of a (right) triangular prism? Multiply the area of one end by the length of the prism.
You find the volume of a triangular prism by using this formula: Volume = 1/2 base of the triangle x height of the triangle x height of the prism.
Capacity generally implies volume in geometry. To calculate the volume of a triangular prism, find the area of one of its triangular bases and multiply it by the height of the shape.
calculate the overall volume as if the prism wasn't truncated and did form a central peak (v = 1/2*b*h*l), then calculate the volume of the prism above the truncation. Then deduct this from the overall volume.
"triangular" is an adjective - it is not enough to define a shape. You can have a triangular pyramid or a triangular prism and there will be different methods to calculate their volumes.
triangular prism- formula: Abh(area of the base * height)
To calculate the volume of a triangular prism, use the formula ( V = B \times h ), where ( V ) is the volume, ( B ) is the area of the triangular base, and ( h ) is the height (length) of the prism. First, find the area of the triangular base using the formula ( B = \frac{1}{2} \times \text{base} \times \text{height of the triangle} ). Multiply this area by the prism's height to obtain the total volume. This gives you the three-dimensional space the prism occupies.
If you triplied the height of a triangular prism, would that triple it volume
A triangular prism can be thought of as a stack of triangles. Then the volume is equal to the area of the triangular base multiplied by the height of the prism, or 1/2 length * width * height.
To clarify, a triangle is a two-dimensional shape and does not have volume. However, if you're asking about the volume of a triangular prism, you can calculate it by finding the area of the triangular base and then multiplying that by the prism's height. The area of a triangle is calculated using the formula ( \text{Area} = \frac{1}{2} \times \text{base} \times \text{height} ). Finally, the volume of the prism is given by ( \text{Volume} = \text{Area of base} \times \text{height of prism} ).
It depends on triangular what: pyramid, dipyramid, prism, ...
Do you mean, what is the volume of a (right) triangular prism? Multiply the area of one end by the length of the prism.
The volume of any prism is worked out in the same way whether it's a hexagonal prism, circular prism or a triangular prism. You just need to times the length of the prism against the area of the cross-section.
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)