Given the surface area, where S=surface area, the formula for finding the volume is
V = √(S / 4pi)
The shape factor of a sphere, often referred to in terms of its geometric properties, is a measure of its compactness or efficiency in enclosing volume. For a sphere, the shape factor is typically defined as 1, since it has the lowest surface area for a given volume compared to other shapes. This property makes spheres highly efficient in packing and structural applications.
Well, sweetie, a ball is a sphere because a sphere is defined as a perfectly round geometrical object in three-dimensional space. It's got the same distance from its center to all points on its surface, giving it that nice, smooth round shape. If a ball were a cube, it would roll all wonky and not be very good at being a ball now, would it?
There's no such thing as the "formula for a cube". There are formulae for the surface area, the volume, and the length of the cube's sides, in terms of each other. There are also formulae for the number of edges, the number of vertices, and the number of faces of a cube, in terms of its definition. That's at least six different formulae that come along with a cube. Which quantity are you looking for ?
Let V=volume V^(1/3)=Side Length=S 6*S^2=Surface Area Surface Area=6*(Volume)^(2/3)
The volume ( V ) of a sphere is given by the formula ( V = \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3 ). The percentage error in the volume can be approximated using the formula for percentage error in terms of radius: if the error in the radius ( r ) is ( \Delta r ), then the percentage error in volume is approximately ( 3 \times \frac{\Delta r}{r} ). Therefore, if the error in the radius measurement is 2, the percentage error in volume would be ( 3 \times \frac{2}{r} \times 100% ). The exact percentage error will depend on the actual value of the radius ( r ).
144pi sq
Surface area of a sphere = 4*pi*(diameter/2)^squared
The surface area of a sphere is equal to 4 x Pi x radius2
The shape factor of a sphere, often referred to in terms of its geometric properties, is a measure of its compactness or efficiency in enclosing volume. For a sphere, the shape factor is typically defined as 1, since it has the lowest surface area for a given volume compared to other shapes. This property makes spheres highly efficient in packing and structural applications.
Well, sweetie, a ball is a sphere because a sphere is defined as a perfectly round geometrical object in three-dimensional space. It's got the same distance from its center to all points on its surface, giving it that nice, smooth round shape. If a ball were a cube, it would roll all wonky and not be very good at being a ball now, would it?
Coccus
It depends on the exact mathematical definitions of the terms which are generally used in the context of polyhedra. However, in terms of the common usages of the terms, a sphere has one surface, and no vertices or edges.
A cylindrical protist has a higher surface are to volume ratio. This is because of the physical properties of spheres (some rather complicated math proves that spheres hold the most volume for their area).
There's no such thing as the "formula for a cube". There are formulae for the surface area, the volume, and the length of the cube's sides, in terms of each other. There are also formulae for the number of edges, the number of vertices, and the number of faces of a cube, in terms of its definition. That's at least six different formulae that come along with a cube. Which quantity are you looking for ?
Let V=volume V^(1/3)=Side Length=S 6*S^2=Surface Area Surface Area=6*(Volume)^(2/3)
It would help to know why what!
You need to know if the sphere is solid or hollow. You also need the "density" in terms of pounds weight per unit volume. Then Volume = Mass/Density And Radius = cuberoot[3*Vol/(4*pi)]