The biggest impact I think of: Calculus is how people invented the formulas to get the volume and surface area of spheres/cones/pyramids.
peanut butter
The relationship between the surface areas of cylinders, cones, and spheres is that the surface area of a cylinder is equal to the sum of the areas of its two circular bases and its curved surface area, the surface area of a cone is equal to the sum of the area of its circular base and its curved surface area, and the surface area of a sphere is equal to four times the area of its circular base.
The most general difference is: > The formula for the surface area of anything with a curved surface and edge will involve 'pi'. > The formula for the surface area of anything with only flat surfaces and straight edges won't.
For prisms and cylinders Bh( B means area of the base and h Is height) pyramids and cones it is 1/3Bh and spheres it is 4/3pi r cubed. you just need one you in the question
The biggest impact I think of: Calculus is how people invented the formulas to get the volume and surface area of spheres/cones/pyramids.
peanut butter
The relationship between the surface areas of cylinders, cones, and spheres is that the surface area of a cylinder is equal to the sum of the areas of its two circular bases and its curved surface area, the surface area of a cone is equal to the sum of the area of its circular base and its curved surface area, and the surface area of a sphere is equal to four times the area of its circular base.
The most general difference is: > The formula for the surface area of anything with a curved surface and edge will involve 'pi'. > The formula for the surface area of anything with only flat surfaces and straight edges won't.
For prisms and cylinders Bh( B means area of the base and h Is height) pyramids and cones it is 1/3Bh and spheres it is 4/3pi r cubed. you just need one you in the question
The surface area of prisms or pyramids are simply the total area of the corresponding nets.
Well, the formula for the surface area for one sphere is 4∏r2So if you have two identical spheres, the formula for the surface area of both would be 8∏r2
well at the bottom there is proberly two round spheres so what you do is you is times the spheres by the area of the pyramids base to find out how big it is. ^^this guy is trolling where is there a sphere in a pyramid
math and arithmetic
Two spheres that are congruent are the same size and shape. Therefore, they would have the same surface area. So this statement is always true.
A sphere has no base, and since it has no base, it has only a surface area and no lateral area.
The formula for the surface area of a sphere is 4πr2. The formula for the volume of a sphere is 4/3πr3.