Some of the many applications that pi is used in geometry are as follows:- Finding the area of a circle Finding the circumference of a circle Finding the volume of a sphere Finding the surface area of a sphere Finding the surface area and volume of a cylinder Finding the volume of a cone
Given the surface area, where S=surface area, the formula for finding the volume isV = √(S / 4pi)
Yes. Second contribution: Surface area of sphere = XXXVI = 36 square inches. When all the working out is done, which the previous contributor has failed to do, the answer is: Volume of the sphere = 20.311 cubic inches correct to three decimal places. This was achieved by rearranging the formula (4*pi*r2) for finding the surface area of the sphere in order to find its radius. The radius was then used in the formula (4/3*pi*r3) for finding the volume of the sphere.
The volume for a sphere is: 4πr3 3 the π is pie (3.14)
Volume = 4/3 * pi * radius * radius * radius Surface Area = 4 * pi * radius * radius
Some of many examples are:- Finding the circumference of a circle Finding the area of a circle Finding the surface area of a sphere Finding the volume of a sphere Finding the surface area of a cylinder Finding the volume of a cylinder Finding the volume of a cone Finding the surface area of a cone
Some of the many applications that pi is used in geometry are as follows:- Finding the area of a circle Finding the circumference of a circle Finding the volume of a sphere Finding the surface area of a sphere Finding the surface area and volume of a cylinder Finding the volume of a cone
The circumference of a circle divided by its diameter is the value of pi and pi has a wide range of uses some of which are:- Finding the volume of a sphere Finding the surface area of a sphere Finding the volume of a cone Finding the volume of a cylinder Finding the area of a circle Finding the circumference of a circle
Given the surface area, where S=surface area, the formula for finding the volume isV = √(S / 4pi)
Yes. Second contribution: Surface area of sphere = XXXVI = 36 square inches. When all the working out is done, which the previous contributor has failed to do, the answer is: Volume of the sphere = 20.311 cubic inches correct to three decimal places. This was achieved by rearranging the formula (4*pi*r2) for finding the surface area of the sphere in order to find its radius. The radius was then used in the formula (4/3*pi*r3) for finding the volume of the sphere.
The volume for a sphere is: 4πr3 3 the π is pie (3.14)
The surface area of a sphere with a volume of 3500pi is: 2,391 square units.
Volume = 4/3 * pi * radius * radius * radius Surface Area = 4 * pi * radius * radius
No. The surface to volume ratio of a sphere is always smaller than that of a cube. This is because the sphere has the smallest surface area compared to its volume, while the cube has the largest surface area compared to its volume.
Volume of a sphere = 4/3*pi*radius3 and measured in cubic units
Use the formula for volume to solve for the radius of the sphere and then plug that radius into the formula for the surface area of a sphere.
Its the 16th letter of the Greek alphabet Its pi day on March 14th Its value to two decimal places is 3.14 Its worked out by dividing the circumference of any circle by its diameter Its true value is probably infinity Its used in finding the area of a circle Its used in finding the circumference of a circle Its used in finding the volume of a sphere Its used in finding the surface area of a sphere Its used in finding the volume of a cone Its used in finding the curved surface area of a cone