x^3
A cylinder with these dimensions has a volume of about 2.61 US gallons of water.
The volume goes up by 9 times
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.
It doubles it.
A liquid takes up the shape of a container without its volume changing.
When linear dimensions are multiplied by 'K', - perimeter is also multiplied by 'K' - area is multiplied by K2 - volume is multiplied by K3
x^3
For a box, the dimensions the define a volume would be:Height, Width, and DepthFor a cylinder, the dimensions that define a volume would be:Height and Diameter
That of course will depend on their dimensions of which none have been given
A cylinder with these dimensions has a volume of about 2.61 US gallons of water.
The volume goes up by 9 times
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 increases by a factor of four.
Yes.
Changing the shape of an object can affect its volume. For example, reshaping a solid object may compress or expand its volume, depending on the changes made to its dimensions. However, sometimes changes in shape may not impact the volume, such as stretching a material in one direction without altering its thickness.
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.