Ignore the orange skin. Concentrate on the edible part. What shape is it? How would you calculate its volume?
An L shaped figure is a plane figure and so will not have a volume.
That depends on the exact size of the orange.
Zero. It is a plane figure and so has no volume.
it would be the figure's volume
The volume is the Area multiplied by thickness (if the thickness is constant). Area = 1/2 ((a+b)*h) a = the base length b = the top length h = the height (constant) t = the thickness (constant) Volume = Area*t Please note that a trapezium and a trapezoid are defined differently in England and the USA. In England the trapezium has the base and top parallel and the area calculation above is for that definition but the area calculation for a trapezoid is different. The volume will still be Area*t.
A circle has no volume. It is a planar figure and is flat, and it has no thickness. A circle does not have any thinkness just as a plane, the construct on which it is drawn, has no thickness.
A pentagon is a two-dimensional geometric figure and therefore has area but not volume. To have volume, a geometric figure must have height or thickness as well as its plane dimensions.
A plane figure has no thickness, so it has no volume. Without volume, it can't have any mass.
Volume
The difference may be due to the thickness of the can.
Its volume is 200 cm3 for every centimeter of thickness.(You haven't mentioned what the book's thickness is.)
The average volume of an orange is 246.45 centimeter cubed. This is assuming that the average orange weighs about 100 g.
It depends on the type of figure. If it is a 2D figure, then it is called area. If it is a 3D figure, then it is called volume.
An L shaped figure is a plane figure and so will not have a volume.
its weight divided by its volume. the volume is the circumference times thickness
By comparing the volume given to each figure.
That depends on the exact size of the orange.