Please Help. (1 Viewer)

rr.dun.dun

Member
Joined
Nov 17, 2006
Messages
88
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2007
Does anyone know how to work out these questions?

Rosemary is having a party and decides to make an 'ice bowl' to hold punch. She freezes water in the space between two hemispherical bowls of diameter 16cm and 22cm.

(a) What is the volume of each ice bowl?
(b) What is the volume of the 'ice bowl'?
(c) What is the total surface area of the 'ice bowl'?
(d) How many litres of punch will the 'ice bowl' hold?
 

yosemite sam

Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2006
Messages
356
Gender
Female
HSC
2007
does a) mean what is the volume of each bowl used? if it does...
a) V=(4/3 x pi x r^2) divided by 2
so for the 16cm diameter bowl, V=(4/3 x pi x 8^2) x0.5
= 134.04 cm^3 (2 d.p)
and for the 22cm diameter bowl, V=(4/3 x pi x 11^2) x 0.5
= 253.42cm^3 (2 d.p)
b) volume of the ice bowl would be the volume of the bigger bowl minus the volume of the smaller bowl
so, 253.42-134.04 = 119.38 cm^3 (2 d.p)
c)Total surface area would be half the surface area of the small bowl, half the surface area of the big bowl and then the annulus
so, formula for surface area is 4 x pi x r^2
Small bowl = (4 x pi x 8^2) divided by 2
=402.12cm2 (2. dp)
large bowl = (4 x pi x 11^2) divided by 2
= 760.27cm2 (2 d.p)
annulus = pi x 11^2 - pi x 8^2
= 121 - 64
= 57cm2
total surface area = 402.12+760.27+57
=1219.39cm2 (2 d.p)
d) volume in litres - cant think of it right now.
i'm not entirely sure if what ive done is right, comeone can feel free to correct it if its wrong. hope that helps
 

LoneShadow

Uber Procrastinator
Joined
May 24, 2004
Messages
877
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
N/A
looks correct to me. Assuming the smaller bowl is thin, the volume "ice bowl" can hold is the same as the volume of smaller bowl.

[of course in all of these we are assuming the top of the bowls used are in the same plane, else it has to be factored in]
 
Last edited:

rr.dun.dun

Member
Joined
Nov 17, 2006
Messages
88
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2007
yosemite sam said:
does a) mean what is the volume of each bowl used? if it does...
a) V=(4/3 x pi x r^2) divided by 2
so for the 16cm diameter bowl, V=(4/3 x pi x 8^2) x0.5
= 134.04 cm^3 (2 d.p)
and for the 22cm diameter bowl, V=(4/3 x pi x 11^2) x 0.5
= 253.42cm^3 (2 d.p)
b) volume of the ice bowl would be the volume of the bigger bowl minus the volume of the smaller bowl
so, 253.42-134.04 = 119.38 cm^3 (2 d.p)
c)Total surface area would be half the surface area of the small bowl, half the surface area of the big bowl and then the annulus
so, formula for surface area is 4 x pi x r^2
Small bowl = (4 x pi x 8^2) divided by 2
=402.12cm2 (2. dp)
large bowl = (4 x pi x 11^2) divided by 2
= 760.27cm2 (2 d.p)
annulus = pi x 11^2 - pi x 8^2
= 121 - 64
= 57cm2
total surface area = 402.12+760.27+57
=1219.39cm2 (2 d.p)
d) volume in litres - cant think of it right now.
i'm not entirely sure if what ive done is right, comeone can feel free to correct it if its wrong. hope that helps

the answer of (c) is wrong. the answer is supposed to be 1341cm2
why did you need the annulus?
 

yosemite sam

Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2006
Messages
356
Gender
Female
HSC
2007
because if its the surface area then you would have the area on the outside of the bowl, the area on the inside and there would be a rim between them of a 3 cm annulus. like the top of a donut. if a donut was a bowl.
 

Freshmex

Stapler Donator.
Joined
May 17, 2006
Messages
82
Location
Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
I'll finish it:

annulus = pi x 11^2 - pi x 8^2
= 121 - 64
= 57cm2
total surface area = 402.12+760.27+57
=1219.39cm2 (2 d.p)

The annulus * 57; it equals 179.07.
Otherwise, 402.12+760.27+179.07= 1341cm2.

As for D,

V(sphere)= 4/3πr^3. The answer you want is half the volume of the bowl's inner sphere; i.e. the sphere with a radius of 8cm: it is in this space which liquid can be held. So, 4/3π8^3= 2144.66cm^3, giving about 2.14 Litres of punch (neglecting that punch will occupy more space than water). That should be the answer.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top