what about in further? if the question didnt ask we should leave in standard?
yeah you'll have to check with someone who did further, but methods (and specialist) always require exact values unless otherwise specified
also, a container the shape of a cone, with its circular face on the ground, is filled to a third of its depth. what fraction of the total volume is filled with water?
you're going to need to find the volume occupied by the water and then divide this by the total volume to get the fraction
the total volume is easy, V_total = 1/3 area of base * height = 1/3 * pi * r^2 * h
(hopefully those variables will cancel when we do the division and we'll get a fraction)
the volume filled is a little more complicated, but can be found if you consider the entire cone and then subtract a shorter cone with height 2/3 of the total height (this also means it will have 2/3 the radius, by similar triangles)
so for this shorted cone height = 2/3 h and radius = 2/3 r where h and r are the dimensions of the container, as defined in the volume formula we got before
V_filled = V_total - V_smaller_cone
= V_total - 1/3 area of base * height
= V_total - 1/3 * pi * (2/3 r)^2 * (2/3 h)
= V_total - 8/81 * pi * r^2 * h
= (1/3 * pi * r^2 * h) - (8/81 * pi * r^2 * h)
so the fraction is
V_total / V_filled
= [(1/3 * pi * r^2 * h) - (8/81 * pi * r^2 * h)] / (1/3 * pi * r^2 * h)
and luckily we can cancel r^2, h, and pi leaving
= [(1/3) - (8/81)] / (1/3)
= 19/27
i think
sorry for the lack of latex!
ando. A cylinder of Radius R and Height H has volume V. the volume of a cylinder with radius 3R and heigh H is.... answer is 27V but i get 9V?
I get 9V too
the volume of a cylinder is the area of the base times the height of the cylinder. in this case, the height remains the same but the radius triples which means the area increases by a factor of 9 (area depends on r^2) which gives 9V
could easily be a mistake in the book, or you could have misread the question (though i cant think of a simple error that'd cause this issue)