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Cylinder A has the same volume as cylinder B. If the radius of A is three times the radius of B, what is the ratio of the height of A to the height of B?

asked
User Stitty
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1 Answer

2 votes

The answer is 1:9

Explanation:

Step 1 :

Given the radius of cylinder A is 3 times the radius of cylinder B.

we know the formula for a cylinder's volume,

The Volume of the cylinder (V) = πr²h

Step 2 :

Let r be the radius of cylinder B, then the radius of cylinder A is 3r

substituting the values of the radius in the above equation we get,

The volume of cylinder A = π.(3r²)·h

=(9)(π). (r²) .h

Tripling the radius in cylinder A the volume becomes 9 times the volume of cylinder B. The height of cylinder A must be 1/9 the height of cylinder B, if the volumes are to be the same.

ANSWER: The ratio of the heights of cylinders A and B is 1:9.

answered
User Matthew Crews
by
7.3k points

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