Volume of Spheres at a Glance

A ball is a sphere. A sphere is a 3-D shape. 3-D shapes have volume. So a ball has volume. What it doesn't have is a base. So our tried and true formula for volume: Base × height, or Bh, doesn't work sp-here (get it?). Luckily, a brilliant ancient Greek mathematician named Archimedes figured out a formula for the volume of a sphere that doesn't require the area of a base. It is: 4/3 × pi × the radius cubed, or 4/3 πr3.

Which came first, the circle or the sphere? They're eerily alike. A sphere has a center just like a circle does; it's the point in the middle of the sphere that is the same distance from every point on the sphere. A sphere has a diameter, just like a circle, and it goes from one point on the sphere, through the center, to another point on the sphere. And finally, just like a circle, the radius of a sphere is half the diameter. It's also the distance from the center to any point on the sphere.

If the radius of a sphere is 15 cm, then the volume is 4/3 (π) (15)3 which is 4/3 π (3375 cm3) = 4500 π cm3 = 14,130 cm3.

Example 1

Sphere

The diameter of this sphere is 11.9 cm, so the radius is half of that, 5.95 cm.


Example 2

You cut an orange in half and measure the radius to be 1.5 in. What is the volume of the orange half?


Example 3

A basketball has a diameter of 9 inches. What is the volume?


Exercise 1

Find the volume of this sphere:

Sphere


Exercise 2

The circumference of the circular base of this half sphere is equal to 8π cm.What is its volume?

Half a sphere