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WELL, The volume of the tank is 4*3*1.5=18m3. The volume of a rectangular stone is 0.15*0.1*0.08=0.0012m3. To raise the water to the top, the volume of stones that occupy the tank must be equal to the remaining space unfilled by water. That is, Volume of stones to be dropped = Volume of Tank - Volume of water in the tank. Now the Volume of water in the tank is 0.6*4*3=7.2m3. Empty space in tank = 18 - 7.2 m3 = 10.8m3. To get the number of stones to be dropped to fill this empty volume, Number of stones = Volume of empty space / volume of a stone. = 10.8 / 0.0012 = 9000.
Volume = pi*52*10 = 785.398 cubic feet to 3 decimal places
step 1: get a water tank, larger than the bathtub in bathroom, smaller than a swimming pool. step 2: make calibrations of volume on the tank, i.e. water level indicator. step 3: fill water in it, enough to drown you completely, take reading of the water level then. say R1. step 4: get into the tank, without splashing water, make sure no water spills out of tank. submerge completely with head also inside the water. take reading(ask someone to do so). say R2. R2-R1= your volume. the difference in volume is your body volume.
We need a 3 rd measure for volume
Volume of tank is needed. Let's assume volume of tank = V ft^3 Rate of pump = 100/0.5 ft^3/hr = 200 ft^3/hr To solve for time: V ft^3 X hr/200 ft^3 = T hr
Tank Williams is 6' 3".
3 inches
Volume of a sphere = 4/3*pi*radius3 Volume = 4/3*pi*93 = 3053.628059 Volume = 3054 cubic feet to the nearest cubic foot.
volume of spherical = 4/3*Pi*Radius^3 = 4/3*3.14*32^3=137188
Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height Volume = 5301.437603 or 5301.438 cubic inches to 3 d.p.
The answer to this is pretty straightforward. First, the volume a tank measuring 100 by 40 by 60 cm is 100x60x40cm = 240,000 cm^3 or cubic cm. Since one liter = 1000 cm^3, the total tank volume is thus 240 liters. If the tank is half full, then simply halve the amount of water so the tank would contain 120 liters if half full. The same approach can be used for any tank or container assuming it's volume is known, or can be calculated.
An aquarium is 10 ft long, 3 ft wide, and is filled with water to a depth of 7 ft. Water weighs 62.4 pounds per cubic foot. What is the volume and weight of the water in the tank