area of the base*height
By inserting the data you know into the formula for the volume of a cylinder, and solving the resulting equation for the quantity you don't know - in this case, for the height. The formula for the volume of a cylinder is: volume = pi x radius2 x length. The radius is half the diameter.
1884 cm3
If you look at the formulas for volume of a cone and volume of a cylinder you can see that a cone will fit in exactly three times if the height and radius of the cone and cylinder are equivalent. A cone has the equation: (1/3)*pi*(r^2)*h=Volume. And a cylinder has the equation: pi*(r^2)*h=Volume. With h equaling height and r equaling radius, you can see that 3*(Volume of a cone)=Volume of a cylinder. Therefore, the cone would fit in three times if height and radius are equivalent for the two figures.
pi*radius2*height = volume of a cylinder height = volume divided by pi*radius2
area of the base*height
The volume of a cylinder is given by the equation V=2*pi*r*h V=volume r=radius h=height Since the height and volume are given in this case, rearranging the equation will show that r= V / (2*pi*h). With that equation you can find the radius of any cylinder with known volume and height.
The area of the circular face multiplied by the cylinders height
By inserting the data you know into the formula for the volume of a cylinder, and solving the resulting equation for the quantity you don't know - in this case, for the height. The formula for the volume of a cylinder is: volume = pi x radius2 x length. The radius is half the diameter.
The surface area of a cylinder with radius r and height h is given by:A = 2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*r*hThis can be rewritten as a quadratic equation in r2*pi*r^2 + 2*pi*h*r - A = 0One solution for this quadratic equation will be negative - reject that since a radius cannot be negative. The other is positive and is the required answer.
I think you want formula's for a Cylinder? Volume = (pi)r^2 x height Surface Area = 2(pi) radius x height
1884 cm3
If you look at the formulas for volume of a cone and volume of a cylinder you can see that a cone will fit in exactly three times if the height and radius of the cone and cylinder are equivalent. A cone has the equation: (1/3)*pi*(r^2)*h=Volume. And a cylinder has the equation: pi*(r^2)*h=Volume. With h equaling height and r equaling radius, you can see that 3*(Volume of a cone)=Volume of a cylinder. Therefore, the cone would fit in three times if height and radius are equivalent for the two figures.
The volume of a circular cylinder varies directly with the height of the cylinder and with the square of the cylinder's radius If the height is halved and the radius is doubled then the volume will be increased.
Find the volume of the cylinder
pi*radius2*height = volume of a cylinder height = volume divided by pi*radius2
Volume of a cylinder = PI r^2 h, where r is the radius and h is the height r = 4h (given) Substitute r=4h in the formula Volume = PI (4h)^2 h V = 16 PI h^3