Volume of cylinder 1= 716.197244 cubic cm
Volume of cylinder 2 = 238.7324147 cubic cm
the dimensions of the cylinder would be 2 times greater. We just had a test on this stuff and this was one of the questions.
No. The shape with the greatest volume to surface area ratio is the sphere. Therefore i surmise that the cylinder that looks closer to a sphere in proportions will have the greater volume. A cylinder with a square "cross section" (axially) would then have the greatest volume for a given area.
, is what I found on the internet as the formula to solve the volume of a cylinder, I would double-check though.
The volume of a 300mm diameter by 600mm deep cylinder is: 42,412,000 mm3
It depends on what r is and on what information you have. Even if r is a radius of a circular shape, you would have different formulae depending on whether: it is a sphere and you have the volume, it is a sphere and you have the surface area, it is a circle and you have the area, it is a circle and you have the circumference, it is a circle and you have the length and angle of an arc, it is a cone and you have volume and height, it is a cylinder and you have volume and height etc.
A piece of paper rolled into a cylinder lengthwise would have a greater volume because it would have a larger radius compared to one rolled into a cylinder widthwise. The volume of a cylinder is maximized when the radius is maximized, which occurs when the paper is rolled lengthwise.
the dimensions of the cylinder would be 2 times greater. We just had a test on this stuff and this was one of the questions.
The volume of 12.0000 mL would be recorded as 12.00 mL when measured from a 50-mL graduated cylinder because the cylinder has markings in increments of 1 mL. It is standard practice to record the volume to two decimal places for greater accuracy.
Divide the volume by height first. Then divide the quotient which is the area by pi. Next find the square root of that number. The diameter of the base would be double the square root and then multiply the diameter by pi.
- if the cylinder is sealed by welding, the same volume- if the cylinder is open - any initial gas
No. The shape with the greatest volume to surface area ratio is the sphere. Therefore i surmise that the cylinder that looks closer to a sphere in proportions will have the greater volume. A cylinder with a square "cross section" (axially) would then have the greatest volume for a given area.
, is what I found on the internet as the formula to solve the volume of a cylinder, I would double-check though.
The volume of a 300mm diameter by 600mm deep cylinder is: 42,412,000 mm3
A cup is usually a roughly cylindrical hollow container. The circumference of a cup would be the length of a piece of string wrapped around the cylinder.
The volume of a liquid.
It depends on what r is and on what information you have. Even if r is a radius of a circular shape, you would have different formulae depending on whether: it is a sphere and you have the volume, it is a sphere and you have the surface area, it is a circle and you have the area, it is a circle and you have the circumference, it is a circle and you have the length and angle of an arc, it is a cone and you have volume and height, it is a cylinder and you have volume and height etc.
a cylinder has a ciruclar base. if the circle has a diameter of 12 then the volume would be 7686.72