If the oval tank is standing with the water level parallel to the oval bottom then the surface area of the oval times the water depth is the volume. V = A x h
Oval is an unprecise term. If you had said elliptical it would be easier knowing the major and minor axes.
If the tank is lying down, or at any other angle than standing up, with the water surface NOT parallel to the oval bottom it becomes rather difficult.
Yes, you can find the volume of an oval.
There is no volume formula for an oval(4/3)*(pi)*(r1)*(r2)*(r3) is the formula for an oval
Zero. It is a plane figure and so has no volume.
Camel
Since it's an oval and not a circle, you would need the 'long' and 'short' diameters to be able to calculate area, which then with the depth, you can calculate volume.
An oval is a plane (2-dimensional) figure and therefore its volume is always 0. The volume of an ellipsoid is 4/3*pi*r1*r2*r3 where ri is the radius along the ith axis.
First of all, your 52" pool will have 48" of water. An oval pool is actually an obround consisting of two arcs and a rectangular area between them. The rectangular area is 8 ft x 16 ft, volume of which is 512 cu ft. The two arcs together makes a perfect circle of 16 ft in diameter, and has a volume of 805 cu. ft. Added together and converted to liquid volume is 11,348 U.S. gallons of water.
Without complete information on this problem, one cannot answer this. Shape of the tank, whether it is Horizontal or Vertical or Rectangular or Oval, any one of the parameters are needed. In a word, you need volume of tank. Fix to a shape and input necessary formula to get the solution
water wave is in the shape of a oval
Ah*L*W = r2*h*L2*W2
Assuming the pool is rectangluar (and not an oval or some other shape), then the volume is 2,875,392 cubic inches. There are 231 cubic inches in a gallon, so the pool holds 12,447.58 gallons of water.