Volume | |
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A measuring cup can be used to measure volumes of liquids. This cup measures volume in units of cups, fluid ounces, and millilitres.
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Common symbols
| V |
SI unit | Cubic metre [m3] |
Other units
| Litre, Fluid ounce, gallon, quart, pint, tsp, fluid dram, in3, yd3, barrel |
In SI base units | 1 m3 |
Dimension | L3 |
Volume is the quantity of three-dimensional space enclosed by a closed surface, for example, the space that a substance (solid, liquid, gas, or plasma) or shape occupies or contains. Volume is often quantified numerically using the SI derived unit, the cubic metre. The volume of a container is generally understood to be the capacity of the container; i. e., the amount of fluid (gas or liquid) that the container could hold, rather than the amount of space the container itself displaces. Three dimensional mathematical shapes are also assigned volumes. Volumes of some simple shapes, such as regular, straight-edged, and circular shapes can be easily calculated using arithmetic formulas. Volumes of complicated shapes can be calculated with integral calculus if a formula exists for the shape's boundary. One-dimensional figures (such as lines) and two-dimensional shapes (such as squares) are assigned zero volume in the three-dimensional space.
The volume of a solid (whether regularly or irregularly shaped) can be determined by fluid displacement. Displacement of liquid can also be used to determine the volume of a gas. The combined volume of two substances is usually greater than the volume of just one of the substances. However, sometimes one substance dissolves in the other and in such cases the combined volume is not additive.
In differential geometry, volume is expressed by means of the volume form, and is an important global Riemannian invariant. In thermodynamics, volume is a fundamental parameter, and is a conjugate variable to pressure.
Units
Any unit of length gives a corresponding unit of volume: the volume of a cube whose sides have the given length. For example, a cubic centimetre (cm3) is the volume of a cube whose sides are one centimetre (1 cm) in length.
In the International System of Units (SI), the standard unit of volume is the cubic metre (m3). The metric system also includes the litre (L) as a unit of volume, where one litre is the volume of a 10-centimetre cube. Thus
- 1 litre = (10 cm)3 = 1000 cubic centimetres = 0.001 cubic metres,
- 1 cubic metre = 1000 litres.
- 1 millilitre = 0.001 litres = 1 cubic centimetre.
- 1 million litres = 1000 cubic metres = 1 megalitre.
Related terms
Capacity is defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as "the measure applied to the content of a vessel, and to liquids, grain, or the like, which take the shape of that which holds them". (The word capacity has other unrelated meanings, as in e.g. capacity management.) Capacity is not identical in meaning to volume, though closely related; the capacity of a container is always the volume in its interior. Units of capacity are the SI litre and its derived units, and Imperial units such as gill, pint, gallon, and others. Units of volume are the cubes of units of length. In SI the units of volume and capacity are closely related: one litre is exactly 1 cubic decimetre, the capacity of a cube with a 10 cm side. In other systems the conversion is not trivial; the capacity of a vehicle's fuel tank is rarely stated in cubic feet, for example, but in gallons (an imperial gallon fills a volume of 0.1605 cu ft).The density of an object is defined as the ratio of the mass to the volume. The inverse of density is specific volume which is defined as volume divided by mass. Specific volume is a concept important in thermodynamics where the volume of a working fluid is often an important parameter of a system being studied.
The volumetric flow rate in fluid dynamics is the volume of fluid which passes through a given surface per unit time (for example cubic meters per second [m3 s−1]).
Volume in calculus
In calculus, a branch of mathematics, the volume of a region D in R3 is given by a triple integral of the constant function and is usually written as:Volume formulas
Shape | Volume formula | Variables |
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Cube | a = length of any side (or edge) | |
Circular Cylinder | r = radius of circular base, h = height | |
Prism | B = area of the base, h = height | |
Cuboid | l = length, w = width, h = height | |
Triangular prism | b = base length of triangle, h = height of triangle, l = length of prism or distance between the triangular bases | |
Triangular prism (with given lengths of three sides) | a, b, and c = lengths of sides h = height of the triangular prism | |
Sphere | r = radius of sphere d = diameter of sphere which is the integral of the surface area of a sphere | |
Ellipsoid | a, b, c = semi-axes of ellipsoid | |
Torus | r = minor radius (radius of the tube), R = major radius (distance from center of tube to center of torus) | |
Pyramid | B = area of the base, h = height of pyramid | |
Square pyramid | s = side length of base, h = height | |
Rectangular pyramid | l = length, w = width, h = height | |
Cone | r = radius of circle at base, h = distance from base to tip or height | |
Regular tetrahedron | Edge length, a | |
Parallelepiped | a, b, and c are the parallelepiped edge lengths, and α, β, and γ are the internal angles between the edges | |
Any volumetric sweep (calculus required) |
h = any dimension of the figure, A(h) = area of the cross-sections perpendicular to h described as a function of the position along h. a and b are the limits of integration for the volumetric sweep. (This will work for any figure if its cross-sectional area can be determined from h). | |
Any rotated figure (washer method; calculus required) |
and are functions expressing the outer and inner radii of the function, respectively. |
Volume ratios for a cone, sphere and cylinder of the same radius and height
The above formulas can be used to show that the volumes of a cone, sphere and cylinder of the same radius and height are in the ratio 1 : 2 : 3, as follows.
Let the radius be r and the height be h (which is 2r for the sphere), then the volume of cone is
Volume formula derivations
Sphere
The volume of a sphere is the integral of an infinite number of infinitesimally small circular disks of thickness dx. The calculation for the volume of a sphere with center 0 and radius r is as follows.The surface area of the circular disk is .
The radius of the circular disks, defined such that the x-axis cuts perpendicularly through them, is
Using y as the disk radius, the volume of the sphere can be calculated as
This formula can be derived more quickly using the formula for the sphere's surface area, which is . The volume of the sphere consists of layers of infinitesimally thin spherical shells, and the sphere volume is equal to
Cone
The cone is a type of pyramidal shape. The fundamental equation for pyramids, one-third times base times altitude, applies to cones as well.However, using calculus, the volume of a cone is the integral of an infinite number of infinitesimally thin circular disks of thickness dx. The calculation for the volume of a cone of height h, whose base is centered at (0, 0, 0) with radius r, is as follows.
The radius of each circular disk is r if x = 0 and 0 if x = h, and varying linearly in between—that is,
Polyhedron
Volume in differential geometry
In differential geometry, a branch of mathematics, a volume form on a differentiable manifold is a differential form of top degree (i.e., whose degree is equal to the dimension of the manifold) that is nowhere equal to zero. A manifold has a volume form if and only if it is orientable. An orientable manifold has infinitely many volume forms, since multiplying a volume form by a non-vanishing function yields another volume form. On non-orientable manifolds, one may instead define the weaker notion of a density. Integrating the volume form gives the volume of the manifold according to that form.An oriented pseudo-Riemannian manifold has a natural volume form. In local coordinates, it can be expressed as