Zero. The reason: 1,000 gallons of water will not fit in that space.
the cylinder
First obtain the height of the cylinder. Height = 1077/area of the base (i.e H = 1077 divided by pie-radius-squared) Next get how much water does 1cm of height contain. Take 1077/height. Therefore, volume of rock = 1cm height's volume x 3
Can not be done without the 'Given' radius and height.
A round bath is a cylinder. The volume of a cylinder = area of the base x perpendicular height. Area of the base is πr2 (pi x radius x radius). The radius is half the diameter. The diameter is the width of the circular base. The perpendicular height will be the depth of the water, whether it's up to the top or up to where you have a bath.
To determine how much water a cylinder can hold, you need to know its volume, which can be calculated using the formula ( V = \pi r^2 h ), where ( r ) is the radius and ( h ) is the height. However, you've only provided the height of the cylinder (1m 40cm, or 140cm). To give an accurate answer, the radius of the cylinder is also needed. Once both dimensions are known, you can compute the volume in cubic centimeters, which will equal the volume of water it can hold.
the cylinder
volume = area * height = Pi * Radius^2 * height = Pi * 4 *1 = 12.6m^3 of water = 12600 L
In order to find the volume of the cylinder more information is required as to the actual dimensions of the cylinder. Volume is calculated by knowing the radius and height of the cylinder.
A cylinder filled with water has properties such as volume, surface area, and weight. The volume of water in the cylinder is determined by its height and radius. The surface area of the cylinder is the total area of its curved surface and two circular bases. The weight of the water in the cylinder is influenced by its volume and density.
First obtain the height of the cylinder. Height = 1077/area of the base (i.e H = 1077 divided by pie-radius-squared) Next get how much water does 1cm of height contain. Take 1077/height. Therefore, volume of rock = 1cm height's volume x 3
Can not be done without the 'Given' radius and height.
A round bath is a cylinder. The volume of a cylinder = area of the base x perpendicular height. Area of the base is πr2 (pi x radius x radius). The radius is half the diameter. The diameter is the width of the circular base. The perpendicular height will be the depth of the water, whether it's up to the top or up to where you have a bath.
To determine how much water a cylinder can hold, you need to know its volume, which can be calculated using the formula ( V = \pi r^2 h ), where ( r ) is the radius and ( h ) is the height. However, you've only provided the height of the cylinder (1m 40cm, or 140cm). To give an accurate answer, the radius of the cylinder is also needed. Once both dimensions are known, you can compute the volume in cubic centimeters, which will equal the volume of water it can hold.
The formula for calculating water pressure height is: Pressure Density of water x Gravity x Height.
Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height Volume = 5301.437603 or 5301.438 cubic inches to 3 d.p.
The pressure inside an inverted hollow cylinder in water is equal to the pressure at the depth of the cylinder's centroid multiplied by the specific weight of water. To calculate it, use the formula: pressure = (specific weight of water) * (depth of centroid of cylinder).
Calculate volume of entire cylinder, then divide answer by 2.