if "s" is the length of a side, then the surface area A is 6s^2 (6 times s squared)
the volume V is s^3 (s cubed)
so s = V^(1/3)
and
A = 6V^(2/3)
The formula will depend on what it is that you are trying to find: the volume or the surface area.
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.
Volume = Пr2h Area = 2Пr2+2Пrh (where r=radius of base, h=height of cylinder)
This should be solved in two steps. 1) Use the formula for the area of a cube, and solve for the length of a side of the cube. 2) Using this length, it is easy to find out the volume, with the formula for the volume of a cube.
You measure or calculate the surface area; you measure or calculate the volume and then you divide the first by the second. The surface areas and volumes will, obviously, depend on the shape.
Given the surface area, where S=surface area, the formula for finding the volume isV = √(S / 4pi)
There are different formulae for their volume, surface area, mass, etc. You have not specified what formula and for what purpose.There are different formulae for their volume, surface area, mass, etc. You have not specified what formula and for what purpose.There are different formulae for their volume, surface area, mass, etc. You have not specified what formula and for what purpose.There are different formulae for their volume, surface area, mass, etc. You have not specified what formula and for what purpose.
The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.The answer will depend on formula for WHAT! Its dimensions, surface area, volume, principal diagonal, mass. And on what information is available.
For a cube with sides of length x, surface area = 6x2 and volume = x3.
Sa:v
Volume = Height × Width × Depth Surface area=2(lw+wh+hl)
Use the formula for volume to solve for the radius of the sphere and then plug that radius into the formula for the surface area of a sphere.
That depends on the figure whose surface area and volume you're finding. You could try a Google search for "volume of [figure name]" or "surface area of [figure name]".
Volume= surface area (length x width) x depth re arrange to surface area= depth= Volume/Area Area= Volume/Depth
The formula for the surface area of a sphere is 4πr2. The formula for the volume of a sphere is 4/3πr3.
It depends on what information you have: its radius and slant height, radius and volume, radius and surface area, surface area and volume, etc.
Use the formula for the volume. Replace the data you know (radius and volume), and solve for the missing data (the height). Once you have this height, it is easy to use the formula for the surface area.