An oil tank in the shape of a right circular cylinder with horizontal axis is filled to a depth of 3 feet. If the circular ends of the tank have diameters of 10 feet and the length of the tank is 12 feet, how many cubic feet of oil are in the tank?

The tank is lying on its side, so the above calculation will not work.

Draw a side view of the end of the tank. Since the radius of the tank is 5, the oil surface is a chord 2 feet from the center of the circle. That means that the width of the oil surface is 2√(5^2-2^2) = 2√21 ft across, and subtends an angle θ where sin(θ/2) = √21/5
The area of the oil is thus 1/2 r^2 (θ - sinθ)
Since sin(θ/2) = √21/5, sinθ = 2(√21/5)(2/5) = 4√21/25
thus the area is 1/2 * 25 (0.823 - 4√21/25) = 1.122 ft^2
That makes the volume of oil 1.122 * 12 = 13.464 ft^3

The cylinder is lying on its side, so the question is a bit trickier.

Make a sketch of the circular cross-section
Draw the waterline at a depth of 3 ft, join that chord to the ends of the
diameter.
You should see 2 congruent right-angled triangles, each with
hypotenuse of 5 and a leg of 2 . (5-3 = 2)
Finding the base:
x^2 + 2^2 = 5^2
x = √21
So the length of the chord , (the water line) = 2√21
( I never used that , switched strategy to using angles. )

Central angle: half-central angle:
cosθ = 2/5, θ = 66.42°
so central angle = 132.84°

area of sector :

sector/(π(5^2)) = 132.84/360
sector = 28.982 ft^2

area of triangle sitting on chord:
= 1/2 (5)(5)sin 132.84
= 9.165 ft^2

area of segment = 28.982 - 9.165 = 19.8168

volume of water = surface area * length
= 19.8168*12 = 237.8 ft^3

check my calculations.

π * (d^2 / 4) * h = π * (100 / 4) * 3 = ? ft^3

oops ... missed the horizontal part

should have realized it was to simple for calculus

@mathhelper when u were finding the base, where did x come from or what formula did u use ?

To find the volume of oil in the tank, we first need to find the volume of the right circular cylinder.

The formula to calculate the volume of a cylinder is:

V = π * r^2 * h

Where V is the volume, π is a mathematical constant approximately equal to 3.14159, r is the radius, and h is the height.

Given that the tank is filled to a depth of 3 feet, we can calculate the radius of the circular ends of the tank.

The diameter of the larger circular end is 10 feet, therefore its radius is half of the diameter, which is 10/2 = 5 feet.

Since the tank is a right circular cylinder, the radius of the smaller circular end is the same as the radius of the larger end, which is 5 feet.

The length of the tank is given as 12 feet, which is the height of the cylinder.

Now we can substitute the values into the volume formula:

V = π * 5^2 * 12

Simplifying the equation, we get:

V = π * 25 * 12

V = 300π cubic feet

Therefore, the volume of oil in the tank is 300π cubic feet, which is approximately equal to 942.48 cubic feet.