Relating Surface area to volume

juice34
How do I express the surface area of for instance a sphere in terms of volume?
 
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juice34 said:
How do I express the surface area of for instance a sphere in terms of volume?

(question moved to homework help)

What is the context of your question. The surface area and volume of a sphere are straightforward formulas in terms of the radius. I'm guessing that there is more to your question?
 
I want to express the surface area of a sphere in terms of the volume and not radius.
 
juice34 said:
I want to express the surface area of a sphere in terms of the volume and not radius.

What are the two formulas for volume and surface area? What would be some way to do what you are asking?
 
V(sphere)=(4/3)*pi*R^3
S.A.(sphere)=4*pi*R^3

I am thinking i need to take derivatives, but when you do dV/dR you just get the surface area
 
juice34 said:
V(sphere)=(4/3)*pi*R^3
S.A.(sphere)=4*pi*R^3

I am thinking i need to take derivatives, but when you do dV/dR you just get the surface area

You meant R^2 in the area forumula.

I would think one way would be to express R as a function of volume, and then substitute that back into the area forumula for R... (or the other way around, depending on what you are wanting to do. Does that work?
 
Surface area is equal to 4\pi r^2 and there are no need for derivatives, you have two equations, both with r in them so you want to eliminate r by substitution.
 
Here let's make this more complicated.
#1) V(sphere)=(4/3)*pi*(D/2)^3
#2)S.A.(sphere)=4*pi*(D/2)^3

So i solve to D using equation 1. D=(V(24/(4*pi)))^(1/3)
So can i just plug this D into #2 and wah lah?
 
juice34 said:
Here let's make this more complicated.

:bugeye:

Uhh yep, that's all there is to it... By the way, simplify 24/4pi, unless you like to keep things more complicated :-p
 
  • #10
Sometimes things look more complicated than they are, haha! THANKS GUYS
 
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