To find the volume of a prism, you multiply the area of the base by the height. If the prism has a base of 3 meters by 2 meters, the area of the base would be 3 * 2 = 6 square meters. If the height of the prism is, for example, 4 meters, the volume would be 6 square meters * 4 meters = 24 cubic meters.
Volume of a sphere is 4/3 pi times the cube of its radius.
radius = diameter ÷ 2 volume cylinder = area of end × height → volume = π × radius² × height → volume = π × (diameter ÷ 2)² × height →volume = π × (6m ÷ 2)² × 3 m → volume = 27π m³ ≈ 27 × 3.14 m³ = 84.78 m³ ≈ 84.8 m³ to 1 dp.
Volume = L*W*H So L = V/(W*H) = 144/(2*6) = 12 metres.
surface area = 4πr² → r = √(A/4π) = √(36π m²/4π) = √(9 m²) = 3 m volume = (4/3)πr³ = (4/3)π(3 m)³ = (4/3)π27 m³ = 36π m³
The volume would be 18m3. 3x2x3 = 18
mass [kg] = volume [m^3] * density [kg / m^3] From Newton's 2nd law of motion, weight [N] = mass [kg] * 9.8 [m/s^2] = volume [m^3] * density [kg / m^3] * 9.8 [m/s^2]. Rearranging, we get volume = weight / (density * 9.8) [m^3] Find the weight in [N], then you will know the volume in [m^3].
2.9 x 10-7 m -3
To find the volume of a prism, you multiply the area of the base by the height. If the prism has a base of 3 meters by 2 meters, the area of the base would be 3 * 2 = 6 square meters. If the height of the prism is, for example, 4 meters, the volume would be 6 square meters * 4 meters = 24 cubic meters.
Volume of a sphere is 4/3 pi times the cube of its radius.
If they have the same radius then it is: 3 to 2
Because volume is derived from length. Meters ^3 is volume, just like m^2 is for surface area.
radius = diameter ÷ 2 volume cylinder = area of end × height → volume = π × radius² × height → volume = π × (diameter ÷ 2)² × height →volume = π × (6m ÷ 2)² × 3 m → volume = 27π m³ ≈ 27 × 3.14 m³ = 84.78 m³ ≈ 84.8 m³ to 1 dp.
Volume = L*W*H So L = V/(W*H) = 144/(2*6) = 12 metres.
49152 * * * * * Volume is a 3-dimensional concept and cannot be determined from only 2 linear measures.
Volume in cubic m = pi*radius2*height
2.87x10-7 m3