Solveeit Logo

Question

Question: A hemispherical bowl of internal diameter 36 cm contains a liquid. This liquid is to be filled in cy...

A hemispherical bowl of internal diameter 36 cm contains a liquid. This liquid is to be filled in cylindrical bottles of radius 3 cm and height 6 cm. How many bottles are required to empty the bowl?

Explanation

Solution

Hint: Volume of the liquid is the conserved quantity. Hence, find the volume of the hemispherical bowl and the cylindrical bottle and divide the volume of the hemispherical bowl by the volume of the cylindrical bottle to obtain the number of bottles required.

Complete step-by-step answer:
When the liquid is filled from the hemispherical bowl to the cylindrical bottles, the total volume of the liquid remains the same.
Let nn be the number of cylindrical bottles required to empty the bowl.
Let VH{V_H} be the volume of the hemispherical bowl and VC{V_C} be the volume of a cylindrical bottle.
Then, we have:
Volume of hemispherical bowl = n×Volume of cylindrical bottle{\text{Volume of hemispherical bowl = }}n \times {\text{Volume of cylindrical bottle}}
VH=n×VC .........(1){V_H} = n \times {V_C}{\text{ }}.........{\text{(1)}}
Given that:
Internal diameter of hemispherical bowl, dH=36 cm{\text{Internal diameter of hemispherical bowl, }}{{\text{d}}_H} = 36{\text{ }}cm
Radius of cylindrical bottle, rC=3 cm{\text{Radius of cylindrical bottle, }}{{\text{r}}_C} = 3{\text{ }}cm
Height of cylindrical bottle, hC=6 cm{\text{Height of cylindrical bottle, }}{{\text{h}}_C} = 6{\text{ }}cm
We now find the radius of the hemispherical bowl as follows:
Radius of hemispherical bowl, rH=dH2{\text{Radius of hemispherical bowl, }}{{\text{r}}_H} = \dfrac{{{d_H}}}{2}
 rH=362 cm\Rightarrow {\text{ }}{{\text{r}}_H} = \dfrac{{36}}{2}{\text{ }}cm
 rH=18 cm\Rightarrow {\text{ }}{{\text{r}}_H} = 18{\text{ }}cm
We know that the volume of a hemisphere of radius rr is given by:
V=23πr3 ..........(2)V = \dfrac{2}{3}\pi {r^3}{\text{ }}..........{\text{(2)}}
We also know that the volume of a cylinder of radius rr and height hh is given by:
V=πr2h ..........(3)V = \pi {r^2}h{\text{ }}..........{\text{(3)}}
Using equation (2), the volume of the hemispherical bowl is as follows:
VH=23πrH3 ..........(4){V_H} = \dfrac{2}{3}\pi {r_H}^3{\text{ }}..........{\text{(4)}}
Using equation (3), the volume of the cylindrical bottle is as follows:
VC=πrC2hC ..........(5){V_C} = \pi {r_C}^2{h_C}{\text{ }}..........{\text{(5)}}
Substituting equation (4) and (5) in equation (1), we get:
23πrH3 = n×πrC2hC\dfrac{2}{3}\pi {r_H}^3{\text{ = }}n \times \pi {r_C}^2{h_C}
Solving for nn , we get:
n=2rH33rC2hCn = \dfrac{{2{r_H}^3}}{{3{r_C}^2{h_C}}}
Substituting the values for rH{r_H} , rC{r_C} and hC{h_C} , we get:
n=2(18)33(3)2(6)n = \dfrac{{2{{(18)}^3}}}{{3{{(3)}^2}(6)}}
Simplifying we obtain:
n=18×2×2n = {\text{18}} \times 2 \times 2
n=72n = 72
Therefore, 72 bottles are required to empty the bowl.

Note: You might proceed with the total surface area being equal in both cases but it is wrong, the total volume of the liquid is the conserved quantity. Also note that it is hemispherical bowl and volume of the hemisphere is half of that of volume of sphere, that is, VH=23πr3{V_H} = \dfrac{2}{3}\pi {r^3} .