If I recall correctly, you would start with the formula for the area of a circle (pi*R*R) and then multiply that by the height of the cylinder to get the volume.
This question is a bit ambiguous, since volume is a 3-dimensional property and saying diameter implies a circle which is a 2-dimensional object.
The diameter, alone, is not enough to find the volume of a cylinder. You need the height as well. > Where pi = 3.1416, and d = cylinder diameter cylinder volume = pi * (d/2)2 * length of cylinder
Volume = Pir2 X height Diameter = 2r Pi = 3.1416 Solve for diameter Volume/height = 3.1416(diameter/2)2 (square root of (Volume/height/3.1416)) X 2 = diameter of the cylinder base
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)
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.
Make the radius the subject of the formula 4/3*pi* radius3 = volume and then double it to give the diameter.
The volume of a sphere is 1/6*pi*d3 where d is the diameter.
The diameter, alone, is not enough to find the volume of a cylinder. You need the height as well. > Where pi = 3.1416, and d = cylinder diameter cylinder volume = pi * (d/2)2 * length of cylinder
Volume = Pir2 X height Diameter = 2r Pi = 3.1416 Solve for diameter Volume/height = 3.1416(diameter/2)2 (square root of (Volume/height/3.1416)) X 2 = diameter of the cylinder base
height has to be given. or volume. volume of a cylinder is v = (pi r ^2) h or diameter times height.
divide volume by height then by pi.
Volume is 90.4779 mm3
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)
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.
diameter=9 height=11
Make the radius the subject of the formula 4/3*pi* radius3 = volume and then double it to give the diameter.
Volume of sphere is 1/6 times pi times diameter cubed Thuis Volume = 1/6 (3.14) times diameter cubed or 0.5236 Diameter cubed
38.465