Wiki User
∙ 10y agoVol(Pyramid) = 1/3*Vol(Prism)
Wiki User
∙ 10y agoThey are equal.
You can't compare a length with a volume.
Think in 3-dimensions and make a tetrahedron (a triangular pyramid).
A pyramid has a base and triangular sides which rise to meet at the same point. The base may be any polygon such as a square, rectangle, triangle, etc. The general formula for the volume of a pyramid is:Area of the base * Height * 1/3 The volume of a pyramid with a rectangular base is equal to: Length_of_base * Width_of_base * Height * 1/3
A pyramid has a base and triangular sides which rise to meet at the same point. The base may be any polygon such as a square, rectangle, triangle, etc. The general formula for the volume of a pyramid is: Area of the base * Height * 1/3 The volume of a pyramid with a rectangular base is equal to: Length of base * Width of base * Height * 1/3
They are equal.
You can't compare a length with a volume.
Think in 3-dimensions and make a tetrahedron (a triangular pyramid).
A pyramid has a base and triangular sides which rise to meet at the same point. The base may be any polygon such as a square, rectangle, triangle, etc. The general formula for the volume of a pyramid is:Area of the base * Height * 1/3 The volume of a pyramid with a rectangular base is equal to: Length_of_base * Width_of_base * Height * 1/3
A pyramid has a base and triangular sides which rise to meet at the same point. The base may be any polygon such as a square, rectangle, triangle, etc. The general formula for the volume of a pyramid is: Area of the base * Height * 1/3 The volume of a pyramid with a rectangular base is equal to: Length of base * Width of base * Height * 1/3
NONE - You cannot compare LENGTH to a VOLUME
NONE, a metre is measure of length and does not compare with volume
This question cannot be answered. We need the volume or the surface area of the pyramid to compute the height. The base alone is not enough. Unless the pyramid has all equal sides or something.
There is no sensible answer to this question. A cubic metre is a measure of volume, with dimensions [L3]. A ton is a measure of mass, with dimensions [M]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions without additional information. Think about the mass of a cubic metre of air and compare it with the mass of a cubic metre of concrete.
The volume of a fully submerged object is equal to the volume of water it displaces. This is known as Archimedes' principle, which states that the buoyant force acting on an object is equal to the weight of the water displaced by the object.
The volume is equal to 1/3 times the base area times the height. Incidentally, that's the same formula for the pyramid.
Yes, the volume triples. When you have a height of 18, the volume will equal 864. (Volume of a pyramid is the area of the base x the height x 1/3)18*3=54. When you plug this in to the above listed formula, the volume will be 2592. Divide that by three and you get 864.