you can measure them
Okay, there i'm Adriana and the answer is area and volume both have length x width. The difference is that volume measures with length x width x height and area with just Length x width. Hope you enjoy.www.middle/bryan.ops.org
To obtain the ratio of surface area to volume, divide the surface area by the volume.
The ratio of the surface area of a cube to its volume is inversely proportional to the length of its side.
surface area/ volume. wider range of surface area to volume is better for cells.
you can measure them
Okay, there i'm Adriana and the answer is area and volume both have length x width. The difference is that volume measures with length x width x height and area with just Length x width. Hope you enjoy.www.middle/bryan.ops.org
To obtain the ratio of surface area to volume, divide the surface area by the volume.
it's the problem of surface area -to- volume ratio that mean there is no fitting between increasing of surface area and increasing of volume
The ratio of the surface area of a cube to its volume is inversely proportional to the length of its side.
As the volume of a cell grows, the surface area grows but not as quickly.
surface area/ volume. wider range of surface area to volume is better for cells.
The surface-area-to-volume ratio may be calculated as follows: -- Find the surface area of the shape. -- Find the volume of the shape. -- Divide the surface area by the volume. The quotient is the surface-area-to-volume ratio.
The larger the surface area to volume ratio of a cell, the smaller its size (and vice versa).
To tackle this you first need to know the equations for both volume and surface area. The surface area of a cube is 6x2 where x is the side length. The volume of the cube is x3. Thus x is the cube root of the volume. We can substitute this in to the surface area equation and say that the surface area of a cube is 6volume2/3 This can also be rearranged to say that the volume of the cube is (the surface area/6)1.5
No, doubling the volume of a rectangular prism does not necessarily double the surface area. The relationship between volume and surface area depends on the dimensions of the prism. For example, if you double the height while keeping the base area constant, the volume increases, but the surface area may not double. The specific changes in dimensions will determine the new surface area.
Volume=area * length of that surface