Volume of Cylinders, Cones, and Spheres
Volume of Cylinders, Cones, and Spheres
In geometry, finding the volume of three-dimensional shapes tells us how much space is inside them. For shapes with curved surfaces—like cylinders, cones, and spheres—the formulas all involve π (pi) and the radius (r) of the shape.
Volume of a Cylinder
A cylinder is essentially a circular prism. To find its volume, you calculate the area of its circular base (πr2) and multiply it by its height (h).
Formula: V=πr2h
Example: Find the volume of a cylinder with radius 3 and height 10.
- Identify the given values: r=3, h=10.
- Plug them into the formula: V=π(3)2(10).
- Calculate the exponent: 32=9.
- Multiply: V=π(9)(10)=90π.
The volume is 90π cubic units.
Volume of a Cone
A cone is closely related to a cylinder. If a cone and a cylinder have the exact same base radius and height, the cone will hold exactly one-third of the volume of the cylinder.
Formula: V=31πr2h
Example: Find the volume of a cone with radius 4 and height 9.
- Identify the given values: r=4, h=9.
- Plug them into the formula: V=31π(4)2(9).
- Calculate the exponent: 42=16.
- Multiply: V=31π(16)(9)=π(16)(3)=48π.
The volume is 48π cubic units.
Volume of a Sphere
A sphere is a perfectly round 3D object, like a basketball. Unlike cylinders and cones, a sphere doesn't have a height. Its volume depends entirely on its radius.
Formula: V=34πr3
Example: Find the volume of a sphere with radius 5.
- Identify the radius: r=5.
- Plug it into the formula: V=34π(5)3.
- Calculate the cube: 53=5×5×5=125.
- Multiply: V=34π(125)=3500π.
The volume is 3500π cubic units.