It depends on what the shape is and what information you already have.
If you mean the volume of a cylinder then divide the circumference by 2*pi to find its radius and so:- Volume in cubic units of the cylinder = pi*radius squared*height
Circumference is a linear measure and has no volume - just as a straight line has no volume.
First we have to find the radius and this is done by the dividing circumference by 2*pi and this works out as 5.092958179 Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height Volume = 692.6423124 or 693 cubic units to the nearest unit
about the same as the length of the volume
It depends on what the shape is and what information you already have.
If you mean the volume of a cylinder then divide the circumference by 2*pi to find its radius and so:- Volume in cubic units of the cylinder = pi*radius squared*height
Circumference is a linear measure and has no volume - just as a straight line has no volume.
First we have to find the radius by dividing the circumference by 2*pi which works out as 1.909859317 feet Volume of a sphere = 4/3*pi*radius3 Volume = 29.18050088 or 29.2 cubic feet to the nearest tenth
First we have to find the radius and this is done by the dividing circumference by 2*pi and this works out as 5.092958179 Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height Volume = 692.6423124 or 693 cubic units to the nearest unit
21.99
The volume of a cylinder with a length of 9 and a circumference of 12.56 is: about 113 cubic units.
Volume of a cone = (1/3)*(area of base)*(height). Area of a circle = pi*radius². But you know circumference. Circumference = 2*pi*radius. Rearrange: radius = C/2/pi. Substitute this in for radius above: Area = pi*(C/2/pi)² = C²/(4*pi). Volume = C²*h/(12*pi) [C is circumference, h is height]
Density cannot be calculated using just mass and circumference. Density is calculated using the formula: density = mass / volume. To find the density, you would need to know the volume of the object, which requires additional information such as the shape and dimensions of the object.
To find the density of a penny, you would measure its mass using a scale, then measure its volume by water displacement or using a caliper to measure its dimensions. Divide the mass by the volume to calculate the density of the penny.
about the same as the length of the volume
Circumference = 59.7 cm implies radius = 9.5 cm (approx) That, in turn, implies that volume = 3593.1 cm3