Asked by hello
Which option best describes an informal argument for why the volume of a cylinder of radius r and height h is V=πr2h
𝑉
=
𝜋
𝑟
2
ℎ
?(1 point)
Responses
A cylinder is a stack of h circles, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of πr2
𝜋
𝑟
2
.
A cylinder is a stack of h circles, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of pi r squared .
A cylinder is a stack of h squares, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of πr2
𝜋
𝑟
2
.
A cylinder is a stack of h squares, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of pi r squared .
A cylinder is a stack of r squares, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of πrh
𝜋
𝑟
ℎ
.
A cylinder is a stack of r squares, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of pi r h .
A cylinder is a stack of r circles, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of πrh
𝜋
𝑟
ℎ
.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
A cylinder is a stack of h circles, each with a thickness of one unit and an area of πr^2.
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