First off, what you appear to be asking for is the circumference, the length of area around a circle(or in this case, a body of water). To find the circumference, measure for the diameter, the diameter is the length of one side of a circle to another, this distance must go through the center of the circle. All you have to do is multyply the Diameter by pi.
Diameter is a length measurement. Cubic inches is a volume measurement. Diameter cannot be measured in or converted to cubic inches.
1.219197
Depends on the water pressure, and the diameter and length of the hose. Sorry, but there really is no one answer.
The diameter of the water column does not affect the pressure.It is the height of the column that determines the pressure at the base.(and also the barometric pressure and temperature).
It is as long as necessary. It can be any length. The diameter has to do with how big around it is, nothing to do with the length. Standard pipe length is 20 feet.
It does affect the diameter. At a high height the diameter gets bigger. At a low height the diameter is slower.
First off, what you appear to be asking for is the circumference, the length of area around a circle(or in this case, a body of water). To find the circumference, measure for the diameter, the diameter is the length of one side of a circle to another, this distance must go through the center of the circle. All you have to do is multyply the Diameter by pi.
Diameter is a length measurement. Cubic inches is a volume measurement. Diameter cannot be measured in or converted to cubic inches.
44,912.4 gallons of water per 4,300 feet.
4580.4528 cubic ft. I am assuming that the undefined diameter units was also in ft.
Because without mechanical means of helping to pushing the air, the pressure under even short depths of water render it impossible for a person to breath in or out through it anyways.
You need to know the length and radius (1/2 the diameter) of the cylinder. From there, use this formula: V = radius2x Pi x length
1.219197
Depends on the water pressure, and the diameter and length of the hose. Sorry, but there really is no one answer.
The diameter of the water column does not affect the pressure.It is the height of the column that determines the pressure at the base.(and also the barometric pressure and temperature).
The volume is 31.809 cubic feet.