The quantity that is divided by the surface area is force. Force divided by surface area is equal to pressure.
you divide the surface area by the circumference.
To obtain the ratio of surface area to volume, divide the surface area by the volume.
Yes it is possible.
your cired
Area is a 2 dimensional quantity, finding it for something in three dimensions does not make sense. If you want to find an area-like quantity for 3 dimensional shapes, look into surface area, which is the area of each surface of the not flat shape.
to obtain the ratio of surface area to volume, divide the surface area by the volume.
No. In fact, if they retain their combined volume, their surface area would increase.
If the surface area is very very small then stress is a Tensor quantity.... -MOGRE
The surface-area-to-volume ratio may be calculated as follows: -- Find the surface area of the shape. -- Find the volume of the shape. -- Divide the surface area by the volume. The quotient is the surface-area-to-volume ratio.
Divide the total surface area of the cell by the cell's volume.
Take the surface area of the sphere as of it was whole, and divide by the amount of the sphere that is missing.
You divide the diameter by 2, to get the radius. Then you use the formula for the surface area of a sphere. Surface area of a sphere = 4*pi*radius^2