Two cups A and B are similar, cup A

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the volume of cup B, given that cups A and B are similar with specified heights and the volume of cup A. The scope includes mathematical reasoning and application of geometric principles related to similar shapes.

Discussion Character

  • Mathematical reasoning
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • One participant proposes using the formula for the volume of a cylinder to find the radius of cup A based on its volume and height.
  • Another participant suggests that if the cups are similar, the ratio of their heights will also apply to their radii, leading to a calculation of the volume of cup B based on the derived radius.
  • A different approach is presented, explaining that since the cups are similar, the volume of cup B can be determined by scaling the volume of cup A by the cube of the ratio of their heights, resulting in a specific calculation for cup B's volume.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants present different methods for calculating the volume of cup B, leading to slightly different results. There is no consensus on a single method or final answer, as the calculations yield different approximate volumes.

Contextual Notes

The discussion does not resolve the discrepancies in the calculated volumes and relies on assumptions about the shapes of the cups being similar and cylindrical.

Who May Find This Useful

Readers interested in geometric principles, volume calculations, and the properties of similar shapes may find this discussion relevant.

Matrix
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Hi, I have this question which is pretty easy but I forgot how do do it. Here is the question:
Two cups A and B are similar, cup A has a height of 30CM and cup B has a height of 20CM. Cup A has a volume of 54CM3. Calculate the volume of cup B.
 
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Assuming the cups are cylinders...

v = πr^2*h
54 = πr^2*30
r = √(54/30*π) = .757 cm

I assume by similar you mean the ratio of the cups' heights to their radiuses are the same? If so,

hA/rA = hB/rB
rB = hB*rA/hA = 20*.757/30 = .505

so

vB = π*(.505)^2*20 = 16.02 (approximately)
 
Thanks but is there a simpler method of explaining it?
 
As long as the cups have the same "shape" (are similar) then doubling, tripling, etc. any length does the same to the others.

The volume of any shape is arrived at by multiplying three lengths together (possibly times some constants- like (4/3)pi). Since doubling any length will double all three lengths in the calculation, the volume will be multiplied by 2*2*2= 8. In other words: the volume is multiplied by the cube of the length multiplier. (That's why volume is given in cm3 when length is in cm.)

In your problem A has height 30 cm and B has height 20 cm: to go from A to B, multiply the height by 2/3. Since the two cups are "similar", all lengths are multiplied by 2/3 and so the volume is multiplied by (2/3)^3= 8/27.

Since the volume of A is 54 cm3, the volume of B is
(8/27)(54) cm3.

I get exactly 16 cm3.
 

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