Use the formula for the volume of a cylinder, which is: V = radius2 x Pi x height
A cone with a base of 10cm and a height of 13cm has a volume of 340.34cm3
When you say diagonal do you mean from a point on the circumference at one end to the opposite point on the circumference at the other end? If so then: Diameter of the end can be calculated using Pythagoras: diameter = √(13² - 5²) = √144 = 12 radius = ½ diameter = ½ × 12 = 6 volume cylinder = π × radius² × height = π × 6² × 5 = 180π cm³ ≈ 565.5 cm³
The formula for surface area of a cylinder is 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h. The radius is half of the diameter so you take your diameter, 17, and divide it by 2 to get the radius. You can plug the radius and height into the SA equation and get: 2*pi*(17/2)^2+2*pi*(17/2)*(13) which equals: 144.5pi+221pi=365.5pi
By units do you mean the volume specification? If so, the volume will be in cubic centimetres. 13cm x 13cm x 3cm = 13x13x3 = 507 cubic centimetres or 507 cc.
You would first need to calculate the height. You can use the Pythagorean Theorem for that. Then you can use the formula for the volume of a cone, which is (1/3)Bh (that is, 1/3 times the base area times the height). The base area, of course, is the area of the base circle.Another Answer:130mm is the same as 13cm and using Pythagoras' theorem its height is 12cm and its radius is 10/2 = 5cmVolume: 1/3*pi*52*12 = 100*pi cubic cm
A cone with a base of 10cm and a height of 13cm has a volume of 340.34cm3
When you say diagonal do you mean from a point on the circumference at one end to the opposite point on the circumference at the other end? If so then: Diameter of the end can be calculated using Pythagoras: diameter = √(13² - 5²) = √144 = 12 radius = ½ diameter = ½ × 12 = 6 volume cylinder = π × radius² × height = π × 6² × 5 = 180π cm³ ≈ 565.5 cm³
The formula for surface area of a cylinder is 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*h. The radius is half of the diameter so you take your diameter, 17, and divide it by 2 to get the radius. You can plug the radius and height into the SA equation and get: 2*pi*(17/2)^2+2*pi*(17/2)*(13) which equals: 144.5pi+221pi=365.5pi
26
By units do you mean the volume specification? If so, the volume will be in cubic centimetres. 13cm x 13cm x 3cm = 13x13x3 = 507 cubic centimetres or 507 cc.
Radius = about 13cm Diameter = about 26cm
An object would displace an amount of water equal to its volume. The volume of the object is given by the product of its height, length, and width. V = l*h*w V = 13cm*10cm*8cm = 1040cm3
You would first need to calculate the height. You can use the Pythagorean Theorem for that. Then you can use the formula for the volume of a cone, which is (1/3)Bh (that is, 1/3 times the base area times the height). The base area, of course, is the area of the base circle.Another Answer:130mm is the same as 13cm and using Pythagoras' theorem its height is 12cm and its radius is 10/2 = 5cmVolume: 1/3*pi*52*12 = 100*pi cubic cm
tell what the diameter (d) and radius(r) of each circle is by using this information
1043.6
936 cubic cm
Do you mean area or volume - you've included THREE measurements !