It depends on the shape. The volume of a sphere will increase differently to the volume of a cylinder, for example.
A pipe has the shape of a cylinder; just use the formula for the volume of a cylinder. In metric units, you have the advantage that the units are consistent. For example, if the radius and height of the cylinder are measured in decimeters, the volume will be in cubic decimeters (= liters).
The volume of a cylinder is: pi( 3.14) x Radius squared time height. Example: What is the volume of a cylinder with a radius of 7cm and a height of 10cm? 3.14 x 49 (7x7)= 153.86 x 10= 1,538.6
multiply the volume of the cylinder by 1/3. whatever you get is the volume of the cone
Volume of a cylinder = base area times height
It depends on the shape. The volume of a sphere will increase differently to the volume of a cylinder, for example.
A pipe has the shape of a cylinder; just use the formula for the volume of a cylinder. In metric units, you have the advantage that the units are consistent. For example, if the radius and height of the cylinder are measured in decimeters, the volume will be in cubic decimeters (= liters).
volume of cylinder pir2h
The volume of a cylinder is: pi( 3.14) x Radius squared time height. Example: What is the volume of a cylinder with a radius of 7cm and a height of 10cm? 3.14 x 49 (7x7)= 153.86 x 10= 1,538.6
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.
multiply the volume of the cylinder by 1/3. whatever you get is the volume of the cone
Volume of a cylinder = base area times height
Find the volume of the cylinder
The larger cylinder has a volume of 6225cc
If the volume of the cylinder is 5, then its volume is 5 and its radius doesn't matter.
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.
All you can say is ( for example) for an area of 7 cm2, that "the volume is 7 cm3 per cm height".