The answer will depend on what information you have.
find the surface area of the cone and add it to the surface area of the base so the formula would be pi radius s plus pi radius squared
The formula for calculating development surface area of a truncated cone is Avr = π [s (R + r) + R^2 + r^2]. The solution is area (A) subscript r where r is the radius of the top of the truncated cone. In this formula R stands for the radius of the bottom of the cone and s represents the slant height of the cone.
pi * r * s, where r is the radius of the base and s is the distance along the edge of the cone from the top to the base (not the height).
Curved surface area of a cone = pi*radiud*length of slant
False. The surface area formula for a right cone is not the same as the surface area formula for an oblique cone.
No, the formula is far from simple - requiring elliptical integrals.
Curved surface area of a cone = pi*radius*slant length
it stands for the total surface area
The surface area of a right cone is the amount of square units that is needed to cover the surface of a cone. To find a surface area of a right cone , follow this formula S.A = 3.14rl + 3.14r(r) I hope it helped you.
The curved surface area of a cone is: pi*radius*slant length.
The answer will depend on what information you have.
True. This is because the slant height of an oblique cone cannot be defined.
find the surface area of the cone and add it to the surface area of the base so the formula would be pi radius s plus pi radius squared
Surface Area = Pi*radius(radius + slant height)
Curved Surface Area of a Cone:Multiply the base radius of the cone by pi. Multiply your answer by the length of the side of the cone.Then add the surface area of the base of the cone using the area of a circle = pi x r2
The formula for calculating development surface area of a truncated cone is Avr = π [s (R + r) + R^2 + r^2]. The solution is area (A) subscript r where r is the radius of the top of the truncated cone. In this formula R stands for the radius of the bottom of the cone and s represents the slant height of the cone.