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.
, is what I found on the internet as the formula to solve the volume of a cylinder, I would double-check though.
It doubles The volume of a cylinder height times diameter squared times 3.14
Yes - of course it is !
If the volume is reduced, and all else remains the same, then the pressure will increase by a factor of 2, or it will double.
multiply the volume of the cylinder by 1/3. whatever you get is the volume of the cone
The volume increases by a factor of four.
The volume is doubled.
, is what I found on the internet as the formula to solve the volume of a cylinder, I would double-check though.
It doubles The volume of a cylinder height times diameter squared times 3.14
Yes - of course it is !
If the volume is reduced, and all else remains the same, then the pressure will increase by a factor of 2, or it will double.
Volume and area of a circle #include #include using namespace std; double radius; const double PI= 3.14; double height; void enterValues(){ cout
volume of cylinder pir2h
If the volume of a gas is reduced from 8.0 liters to 4.0 liters, and the temperature remains constant, the pressure will double according to Boyle's Law. Therefore, the pressure of the gas in the cylinder should increase by a factor of 2.
If the area of the base and the height of the cylinder and the cone are the same, then the volume of the cone will always be one third of the volume of the cylinder.
I'm quite sure this is impossible to prove, because the volume of a sphere is not equal to the volume of a cylinder with the same radius and height equal to the sphere's diameter. This can be shown as: Volume of sphere = (4*pi*r3) / 3. Volume of cylinder = pi*r2*h. Here, the height, h, of the cylinder = d = 2r. So, the volume of the cylinder = pi*r2*2r = 2*pi*r3, which obviously does not equal the volume of the sphere. The volume of half a sphere (with radius r) is equal to the volume of a cylinder(whose height is equal to its radius, r) minus the volume of a cone with the same height and radius. Therefore, the volume of a sphere is just double that. If you follow the nearby link, you can see a nice demonstration of that.
multiply the volume of the cylinder by 1/3. whatever you get is the volume of the cone