There is no direct relationship between the two. The ratio depends on the relative measures.
The answer will depend on what aspect the formula is for: the surface area or the volume being the most obvious options.
Surface area is squared; volume is cubed.
A surface area would be vital for determining volume
The two nets of a regular right triangular prism are surface area and volume.
triangular prism- formula: Abh(area of the base * height)
The answer will depend on what aspect the formula is for: the surface area or the volume being the most obvious options.
Surface area is squared; volume is cubed.
A surface area would be vital for determining volume
The two nets of a regular right triangular prism are surface area and volume.
a triangular prism is different from a rectangular prism because: their names are different a triangular prism has a triangle for its' base a rectangular prism has a rectangle base a triangular prism has less sides than a rectangular prism a rectangular prism has more sides than a triangular prism
triangular prism- formula: Abh(area of the base * height)
If you triplied the height of a triangular prism, would that triple it volume
the defnition of find the surface area of triangular prism and cylinder
"triangular" is an adjective - it is not enough to define a shape. You can have a triangular pyramid or a triangular prism and there will be different methods to calculate their volumes.
The answer depends on what measure - volume, surface area - equals 375.
Find the surface area of the top or bottom face and multiply that by the depth of the prism. For example, a triangular prism would have a volume of (1/2 * base * height) * (depth)
No. Relative to its volume, the greater the number of sides, the smaller the volume. In the limit, a cylinder (circular prism, with an infinite number of "sides") will have the least surface area.