asked 103k views
2 votes
How do you rewrite the equation V=1/3s^2h in terms of s​

2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:

s = sqrt(3V/h)

Explanation:

To put this in terms of s, we must first isolate the s^2. So we can multiply by 3/h on both sides. So we get s^2 = 3V/h. Taking the square roots of both sides, we get s = sqrt(3V/h).

answered
User Seabass
by
8.4k points
5 votes


\bf V=\cfrac{1}{3}s^2h\implies V=\cfrac{s^2h}{3}\implies 3V=s^2 h\implies \cfrac{3V}{h}=s^2\implies \sqrt{\cfrac{3V}{h}}=s

answered
User Bnqtoan
by
8.7k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.

Categories