None, unless there is a relation between the semicircle and the cone that you have chosen not to share.
No, there is confusion here over similar words. Volume = length times width times height.
It is volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height or length
The volume of any prism is the product of the area of the base and the distance between the two bases(i.e. Height)
pi*r2*height = volume Make the height the subject of the above formula:- height = volume/(pi*r2)
None, unless there is a relation between the semicircle and the cone that you have chosen not to share.
No, there is confusion here over similar words. Volume = length times width times height.
For Ideal gases, mole fraction=volume fraction
Density = mass divided by volume, measured in kg per cubic metre
height:5
It is volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height or length
Volume is normally used as a measurement in relation to other volumes, or as a sum or total amount. As relational measurements, volume might be in a form similar to a recipe, or it might be given as percentages.
Designate one of the faces as the base, and the distance between the plane the base is on, and the plane the opposite side is on, as the height. Then the volume is the base times the height.
The ancient Greek mathematician Archimedes proved that the volume of a sphere is four times that of the cone with base equal to a great circle of the sphere and height the radius of the sphere. Maybe this is what the poser of the question meant.
If a rectangular prism and a triangular prism have the same length, width, and height, then their volumes are equal. This is because although the shapes are different, they both occupy the same amount of space if their dimensions are the same. The formula for calculating volume is length x width x height for both shapes, resulting in equal volumes.
The volume of any prism is the product of the area of the base and the distance between the two bases(i.e. Height)
pi*radius2*height = volume Make the height the subject of the above formula:- height = volume/pi*radius2