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if i have a rectangular prism, its dimensions are 6,7,and 40. inside the prism is a sphere. the spheres radius is 6. inside the sphere is another rectangular prism. its diemensions are 2,3, and 5. what is the total volume of of the rectangular prismS (notice plural)?

2006-11-12 07:57:31 · 7 answers · asked by conƒused-little-man 2 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

7 answers

this question isnt right. however, it should be 1710 u^3 if it was right

2006-11-12 08:55:23 · answer #1 · answered by hobo h 4 · 0 0

If the sphere has radius 6, its diameter is 12 across.
How can this fit inside prism that is 6 x 7 (x 40).
It already exceeds the base? Am I visualizing this wrong?

2006-11-12 08:06:49 · answer #2 · answered by emilynghiem 5 · 1 0

The sphere is irrelevant to the problem, the volume of each prisim is L x W x H or in equation form v = lwh add the volume of each prism to get the total volume. So t = v1 + v2. Is that clear as mud?

2006-11-12 09:31:10 · answer #3 · answered by ikeman32 6 · 0 0

Never mind this answer. The sphere is larger than the first rectangular prism.

2006-11-12 08:04:01 · answer #4 · answered by Steven Procter 2 · 1 0

grew to become into the unique issue (8x+6) / 2 = 0 ? Then 8x+6 = 0 8x = -6 x = -(6/8) x = -¾ in case you probably did positioned up the completed issue, then I consider the different solutions you have won.

2016-10-21 23:29:21 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

1710 units^3

2006-11-12 08:02:16 · answer #6 · answered by ? 7 · 1 0

2x3x5+6x7x40

2006-11-12 08:04:37 · answer #7 · answered by      7 · 1 0

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