Sphere Volume from Radius: 14 units

Specific conversion page with reference context, calculator, and nearby values.

Author

Dr. Mariam Diallo

Math editorial contributor

Senegalese sociolinguist with a doctorate from Sorbonne, studying code-switching in multilingual urban communities

Reviewed by

Prof. Kenji Tanaka

Math content reviewer

Japanese materials scientist at Kyoto University, known for breakthroughs in sustainable polymer research

Last updatedFebruary 22, 2026

PublishedFebruary 22, 2026

Table of Contents

  1. Value details
  2. Calculator
  3. Nearby reference values
  4. FAQs
  5. Methodology and review
  6. Navigation and related conversions

14 units converts to

11,494.0403 cubic units

Use this as a quick reference for Sphere Volume from Radius.

Value Details

Input: 14 units

Output: 11,494.0403 cubic units

Browse all reference values for Sphere Volume from Radius

Sphere Volume from Radius

Calculate sphere volume from radius using V = 4/3πr³.

Calculated Result

Nearby Reference Values

Sphere Volume from Radius values near 14 units
RadiusSphere Volume
4 units268.0826 cubic units
5 units523.5988 cubic units
6 units904.7787 cubic units
7 units1,436.755 cubic units
8 units2,144.6606 cubic units
9 units3,053.6281 cubic units
10 units4,188.7902 cubic units
11 units5,575.2798 cubic units
12 units7,238.2295 cubic units
13 units9,202.7721 cubic units
14 units11,494.0403 cubic units
15 units14,137.1669 cubic units
16 units17,157.2847 cubic units
17 units20,579.5263 cubic units
18 units24,429.0245 cubic units
19 units28,730.912 cubic units
20 units33,510.3216 cubic units

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Sphere Volume from Radius, formulas, and expected usage.

What does the Sphere Volume from Radius calculator do?

It calculates estimating capacity or volume for spherical tanks, balls, and domed spaces from the values you enter.

What formula does the Sphere Volume from Radius calculator use?

Sphere volume = (4/3) × π × radius³.

What inputs are valid?

Enter a positive radius greater than zero.

When would I use this?

estimating capacity or volume for spherical tanks, balls, and domed spaces

Methodology and Review

This page is generated from the same conversion definition used by the main calculator page, which keeps the calculator, reference table rows, and FAQ schema aligned.

Reviewer and update metadata are shown above and included in structured data. See our editorial policy, review process, and corrections policy.

Use this page as a fast lookup reference, then confirm final project values using applicable standards and manufacturer documentation.