I assume the volume is 100 cubic cm and NOT 100 cm. The volume of a cylinder is cross-sectional area * height 100 = cross sectional area * 30 so that the area of the bottom, or cross section, is 100/30 = 3.333... sq cm
Volume of a cylinder = base area times height
The letter V typically represents the volume of a cylinder, not the area. The letter A is commonly used to represent the surface area of a cylinder.
no
The volume of a cylinder is its height times the area of its base. And the area of its base is the area of a circular shape.
Make the height the subject of the fornula for the volume or surface area of the cylinder
Volume of a cylinder = base area times height
To find the volume of the cylinder, multiply the height of it by the area of its base (its bottom). The volume of a cylinder is expressed as V = h(pi r^2). If you want to find an approximate volume for the substance in the cylinder, multiply the height of the substance by the base of the cylinder. Again, V = h(pi r^2).
The letter V typically represents the volume of a cylinder, not the area. The letter A is commonly used to represent the surface area of a cylinder.
no
The volume of a cylinder is its height times the area of its base. And the area of its base is the area of a circular shape.
The volume of a cylinder is the cross-sectional area of the cylinder multiplied by its length. The perpendicular cross-section of a cylinder is a circle.
Make the height the subject of the fornula for the volume or surface area of the cylinder
If the area of the base and the height of the cylinder and the cone are the same, then the volume of the cone will always be one third of the volume of the cylinder.
Because the volume of the cylinder is proportional to the cross sectional area of the cylinder. The cross sectional area is a circle and the area of a circle is pi*r2.
A cylinder with a surface area of 200cm2 and a height of 20cm has a volume of about 137.96cm3
A cylinder filled with water has properties such as volume, surface area, and weight. The volume of water in the cylinder is determined by its height and radius. The surface area of the cylinder is the total area of its curved surface and two circular bases. The weight of the water in the cylinder is influenced by its volume and density.
First find the area of the cylinder's base, and multiply that by the height. For V = A x h. Volume, Area, height.