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19 December, 03:17

Your classmate claims that if you

double the radius of a sphere, its surface area and

volume will quadruple. What is your classmate's

error? Explain.

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 19 December, 03:41
    0
    SA of a sphere is 4πr² Using a sample of radius 3 the SA would be 36π²

    (4πx3²) If we double the radius and make it 6, the SA would be 144π²

    So for Surface area, your classmate is correct.

    What about the volume? V of a Sphere = 4/3 π r³

    Again using 3 the Volume of a Sphere with radius 3 = 4/3 π 27

    But the volume of a sphere with radius 6 = 4/3 π 216 which is eight times the volume of the smaller sphere. (27 x 8 = 216) So your friend is right about Surface Area but wrong about the volume.
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