V = (4 Pi/3)r3 = (Pi/6)d3
2007-04-18 15:24:10
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Given the radius r, the volume is 4 pi/3 r^3
2007-04-18 15:24:57
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answer #2
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answered by cattbarf 7
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V= 4/3 pi x R to the third power. so say the radius of the sphere is 10. you would multiply 4/3 times 3.14. or 1.25 x3.14. then multiply 10 to the third power which will give you 1000. multiply 1000 by 1.25 x 3.14. your answer should come out to 4189. hope that helps. i'm to lessons behind you. do you happen to use a dark green book with a butterfly and a hockey stick on the front? thats what im using.
2007-04-18 15:29:46
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The radius is a million/2 the diameter, so that's 1255 mm. quantity of a cylinder is the area of the backside situations the peak, that's pi*radius^2*height. So the quantity of water is cubic mm. A liter is one cubic decimeter. A decimeter equals one hundred mm, so a cubic decimeter is one hundred^3 cubic mm=a million cubic mm. So the quantity of the tank in liters is pi*1255^2*2205/a million liters.
2016-12-29 08:36:53
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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You are referring to a sphere:
v = (4 Pi/3)r^3 where r = radius and Pi =3.14159...
2007-04-18 15:26:52
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answer #5
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answered by godofwealth 2
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V= 4/3 x (pi) x (radius)^3
2007-04-18 15:26:49
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Volume= (4pi(r)³)÷3
2007-04-18 16:31:45
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answer #7
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answered by 22 4
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4/3 pie r^3
2007-04-18 15:32:32
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answer #8
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answered by kamcrash 6
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wouldn't give you the answer if i knew it, do your own homework or you will never learn!
2007-04-18 15:25:10
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answer #9
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answered by gone fishing! 5
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