well, they can, but they dont have to be no. :)
2lw + 2lh + 2wh
The exact result depends on the exact ratio of length to diameter; but in principle, with a cylinder you need less surface area - and thus less material - for the same volume.
The formula will depend on what it is that you are trying to find: the volume or the surface area.
surface area of a rectangular prism is the formula: 2lw+2wh+2lh
The surface-area-to-volume ratio may be calculated as follows: -- Find the surface area of the shape. -- Find the volume of the shape. -- Divide the surface area by the volume. The quotient is the surface-area-to-volume ratio.
Yes, they can. They can also have the same surface area, but different volume.
Given the surface area of a rectangular prism, there are infinitely many rectangular prisms possible.
Yes, they can. They can also have the same surface area, but different volume.
Given any rectangular prism, there are infinitely many other rectangular prisms with exactly the same surface area.
The volume of a rectangular prism is its cross-section area times its length.
For the same base dimensions (base area) and the same height, the rectangular prism has more surface area.
2lw + 2lh + 2wh
Yes, you can.
To figure out the surface area of a reactangular prism you have to multiply length x width and then multiply that by how many faces it has, to figure out volume you multiply the length x width x height of the prism and than you will find your answer!!!!!
You can't derive the volume from the surface area.
You must be with K12 if you are it is The surface area of A is greater than the surface area of B.
the question is the anwser