If you have area of base, then who needs the volume ? The whole problem
is nothing but a circle question.
The base is a circle. The area of a circle is (pi R2), and you know the area.
Do you think you can find 'R' now ?
If the volume of a cylinder is 300 and the height is 3, the radius of the base is: 5.65
Yes. The base area is also related to the base radius by:A = radius2 x Pi
You can't. You have to know something about the area of the base as well. Volume=height*base area, therefore height=(volume)/(base area) Since it is a usually circular base on a cylinder, height=(volume)/(pi*(radius^2)=v/(pi(r^2))
In the formula for the volume of a cylinder, ( V = \pi r^2 h ), the radius is squared because the formula calculates the area of the circular base. The area of a circle is given by ( A = \pi r^2 ), which represents the space occupied by the circle. By multiplying this area by the height ( h ), you find the total volume of the cylinder, which is the area of the base extended through the height. Thus, squaring the radius is essential for determining the size of the base.
A round bath is a cylinder. The volume of a cylinder = area of the base x perpendicular height. Area of the base is πr2 (pi x radius x radius). The radius is half the diameter. The diameter is the width of the circular base. The perpendicular height will be the depth of the water, whether it's up to the top or up to where you have a bath.
Cylinder volume = height 10 cm > radius 7 cm > base area of the cylinder = 153.9380400 cm2 Volume = base area x height = 1539.380400 cm 2
find the radius using base area. substitute the radius value in CSA and fine the height. finally substitute radius and height in volume of cylinder formula and find the volume of the cylinder.. Ans:308 cu.cm.
Volume of a CylinderThe volume of a cylinder is the product of the area of its base and its height. Because a cylinder has a circular base, the volume of a cylinder is: Pi x r squared x hwhere r is the radius of the circular base and his the height.
v=pi.r^2h
V=Bh volume=area of the base * height area of the base= pie * radius squared
The radius of the base of the cylinder is: 5.64 cm
Volume = Пr2h Area = 2Пr2+2Пrh (where r=radius of base, h=height of cylinder)
If the volume of a cylinder is 300 and the height is 3, the radius of the base is: 5.65
The volume is Base x height; the Base area is the same as the formula for a circle - which is proportional to the square of the radius. For example, if you double the radius (or the diameter, or the circumference) of a circle, its area will quadruple.
Yes. The base area is also related to the base radius by:A = radius2 x Pi
You can't. You have to know something about the area of the base as well. Volume=height*base area, therefore height=(volume)/(base area) Since it is a usually circular base on a cylinder, height=(volume)/(pi*(radius^2)=v/(pi(r^2))
I'm assuming you are asking about a cylinder. The volume of a cylinder is the area of the base times the height. The base is a circle so its area is pi*r^2. We get V=height*pi*radius*radius = 8*pi*3*3 = 72*pi which is about 226.195