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29 August, 14:24

A cylinder fits inside a square prism as shown. For every cross section, the ratio of the area of the circle to the area of the square is or nr^2 or n/4. Since the area of the circle is n/4 the area of the square, the volume of the cylinder equals

A) pi/2 the volume of the prism or pi/2 (2r) (h) or pi*r*h

B) pi/2 the volume of the prism or pi/2 (4r^2) (h) or 2*pi*r*h.

C) pi/4 the volume of the prism or pi/4 (2r) (h) or pi/4*r^2*h.

D) pi/4 the volume of the prism or pi/4 (4r^2) (h) or pi*r^2*h

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  1. 29 August, 14:34
    0
    Area circle = π*r²

    Area square = l²

    The side of the square is equal to the diameter of the circle

    Area square = D²

    A diameter is always twice the radius

    Area square = (2r) ² = 2²r² = 4r²

    So this is the rate:

    Area circle/Area square = (π*r²) / (4r²)

    Area circle/Area square = π/4

    Volume is always Area*h when cross sectional area is a constant

    Volume Prism = Area Square*h

    Volume Prism = 4r²*h

    Volume Cylinder = Area Circle*h

    Volume Cylinder = π*r²*h

    So far this is option D)

    Let’s calculate the rate:

    Volume Cylinder/Volume Prism = π*r²*h/4r²*h

    Volume Cylinder/Volume Prism = π/4

    Volume Cylinder = π/4 * Volume Prism

    This is also option D)

    Now let’s calculate Volume Cylinder from that formula:

    Volume Cylinder = π/4 * Volume Prism

    Volume Cylinder = π/4 * (4r²*h)

    This is also option D)

    So option D) is correct
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