A right circular cylinder is a cylinder whose generatrices are perpendicular to the bases. Thus, in a right circular cylinder, the generatrix and the height have the same measurements.[1] It is also less often called a cylinder of revolution, because it can be obtained by rotating a rectangle of sides
r
g
g
r
g
In addition to the right circular cylinder, within the study of spatial geometry there is also the oblique circular cylinder, characterized by not having the geratrices perpendicular to the bases.[3]
Bases: the two parallel and congruent circles of the bases;[4]
Axis: the line determined by the two points of the centers of the cylinder's bases;
Height: the distance between the two planes of the cylinder's bases;
Generatrices: the line segments parallel to the axis and that have ends at the points of the bases' circles.
The lateral surface of a right cylinder is the meeting of the generatrices. It can be obtained by the product between the length of the circumference of the base and the height of the cylinder. Therefore, the lateral surface area is given by:
Where:
L
\pi
r
h
2\pir
\pi=
C | |
2r |
C=2\pir
L=2\pirg
r
B=\pir2
To calculate the total area of a right circular cylinder, you simply add the lateral area to the area of the two bases:
A=L+2 ⋅ B
Replacing
L=2\pirh
B=\pir2
A=2\pirh+2\pir2
⇒ A=2\pir(h+r)
or even
A=2\pir(g+r)
Through Cavalieri's principle, which defines that if two solids of the same height, with congruent base areas, are positioned on the same plane, such that any other plane parallel to this plane sections both solids, determining from this section two polygons with the same area,[6] then the volume of the two solids will be the same, we can determine the volume of the cylinder.
This is because the volume of a cylinder can be obtained in the same way as the volume of a prism with the same height and the same area of the base. Therefore, simply multiply the area of the base by the height:
V=B ⋅ h
Since the area of a circle of radius
r
B=\pir2
V=\pir2h
or even
V=\pir2g
The equilateral cylinder is characterized by being a right circular cylinder in which the diameter of the base is equal to the value of the height (geratrix).
Then, assuming that the radius of the base of an equilateral cylinder is
r
2r
2r
Its lateral area can be obtained by replacing the height value by
2r
L=2\pir ⋅ 2r
⇒ L=4\pir2
The result can be obtained in a similar way for the total area:
T=2\pir(h+r)
⇒ T=2\pir(2r+r)
⇒ T=2\pir ⋅ 3r
⇒ T=6\pir2
For the equilateral cylinder it is possible to obtain a simpler formula to calculate the volume. Simply substitute the radius and height measurements defined earlier into the volume formula for a straight circular cylinder:
V=\pir2 ⋅ h
⇒ V=\pir2 ⋅ 2r
⇒ V=2\pir3
It is the intersection between a plane containing the axis of the cylinder and the cylinder.
In the case of the right circular cylinder, the meridian section is a rectangle, because the generatrix is perpendicular to the base. The equilateral cylinder, on the other hand, has a square meridian section because its height is congruent to the diameter of the base.