No matter what you're finding, use the equation V=πr2h. Then solve algebraically.
V=volume
h=height
r=radius
πr2=area of the base
You cannot determine the height and diameter from just the volume because there is an almost infinite number of combinations of height and diameter that could create a particular volume.
You cannot find the height and diameter of a cylinder by knowing the volume only. There are infinite combinations of height and diameter that will result in the same volume. You need to know either the diameter or the height in addition to the volume to calculate the remaining unknown. Volume = pi/4 * d2 * h (note: pi/4 * d2 is the same as pi * r2)
A pipe has the shape of a cylinder; just use the formula for the volume of a cylinder. In metric units, you have the advantage that the units are consistent. For example, if the radius and height of the cylinder are measured in decimeters, the volume will be in cubic decimeters (= liters).
Volume of cylinder = PI r^2 h where r = radius and h= height Volume of Cone = (1/3) PI r^2 h where r=radius and h= height Therefore, the volume of a cone is one-third of the volume of a cylinder.
Volume = pi*radius2*height Volume = pi*5.5*8 = just over 760 cubic inches
You cannot determine the height and diameter from just the volume because there is an almost infinite number of combinations of height and diameter that could create a particular volume.
You cannot find the height and diameter of a cylinder by knowing the volume only. There are infinite combinations of height and diameter that will result in the same volume. You need to know either the diameter or the height in addition to the volume to calculate the remaining unknown. Volume = pi/4 * d2 * h (note: pi/4 * d2 is the same as pi * r2)
The volume of a cylinder is given by the equation V=2*pi*r*h V=volume r=radius h=height Since the height and volume are given in this case, rearranging the equation will show that r= V / (2*pi*h). With that equation you can find the radius of any cylinder with known volume and height.
A pipe has the shape of a cylinder; just use the formula for the volume of a cylinder. In metric units, you have the advantage that the units are consistent. For example, if the radius and height of the cylinder are measured in decimeters, the volume will be in cubic decimeters (= liters).
A balance is used to find the mass of anything, an electronic balance or a beam balance. Did you mean the volume of a cylinder? Volume = area of base x height = pi x radius2 x h
The formula to calculate the volume of a cylinder in cubic inches is V = πr^2h, where V represents the volume, r is the radius of the cylinder's base, and h is the height of the cylinder. Just substitute the values of the radius and height into the formula to find the volume.
Volume of cylinder = PI r^2 h where r = radius and h= height Volume of Cone = (1/3) PI r^2 h where r=radius and h= height Therefore, the volume of a cone is one-third of the volume of a cylinder.
Volume = pi*radius2*height Volume = pi*5.5*8 = just over 760 cubic inches
The volume is equal to the area of the base multiplied by the height. So, to find the height, just divide the volume by the area of the base.
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.
Well, isn't that just lovely! To find the volume of a cylinder, we use the formula V = πr^2h. So, with a radius of 3 and a height of 5, we can plug those values in to find the volume. Just remember to square the radius, multiply by the height, and you'll have your answer in no time!
find the area of the base and multiply that by the height. The base is a circle so its area is Pi x radius squared. Not sure what the radius is in your question. If you mean the base has area 4.4 meters squared, and that is what I think you do, then just multiply that by 3.5 ie 4.4x 3.5 and that is volume of the cylinder.