You simply calculate it like a cone, but the height of the cone is the height to the top of the FILLED part, not all the way. Half-filled is not enough information . . . there can be "half filled" meaning half the height of the cone, but can also be "half filled" meaning half the volume of the cone.
Bird bath
the volume
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.
Volume of half a sphere = 2/3*pi*radius3 Volume = 2/38pi*103 = 2094.395102 cubic units
The amount of water in a half-filled bath would depend on the size of the bath. Half-filled means the bath is filled to half its capacity. You would need to know the total capacity of the bath to determine the exact amount of water.
You simply calculate it like a cone, but the height of the cone is the height to the top of the FILLED part, not all the way. Half-filled is not enough information . . . there can be "half filled" meaning half the height of the cone, but can also be "half filled" meaning half the volume of the cone.
It depends on what size bathtub you have.
It was the 'eureka' moment. Apparently - he was running a bath, and the water filled it right to the top. He got in without thinking, and noticed the water spilling over the edge. Getting out - he calculated that the amount of water lost was the same as his own volume.
He filled a bath half way with water then when he went in he found out that the water moved up, he wondered how that happened. So he started to study further into it....
Because a gas will expand to fill the other half. Gas has no defined volume. Liquids do.
The answer is 40 litres. The trick of the question is that it says the bath has been FILLED with 40 litres of water, therefore, if you add anything else, it'll spill over.
The amount of water in a half-filled cup is an example of volume.
One-half BathA bath with a toilet and sink, but no tub or shower, is generally considered a one-half bath in the United States.
you need to fill a bath half full. then get into the bath and go under the water. the resultant height change in the water level will reflect you volume. I would suggest that you remain under the water for at least 10mins to allow the water surface level to stablise
A half bath in real estate terms is a sink and a toilet. Add a shower and it is a 3/4 bath.
A 'eureka can' is basically a container with a spout. The spout is positioned a little distance below the top of the container. It is used to find the volume of usually an irregular obect by immersion into water and displacing a volume of water equal to the object's volume. To find the volume of an object, the eureka can is filled with water. The water spills out level to the rim of the spout. The obect is then lowered into the eureka can. Water, equal to the volume of the obect, is spilled out via the spout into a measuring container and thus the volume of the object can be discovered. The name of the can comes from the legend that Archimedes when getting into his filled-up bath, he realised that the volume of water that was spilled over was equal to that part of him that was in the bath...and thus "Eureka!", Ive found it!