You cannot know a precise radius without knowledge of structure and the unit cell. Radius is calculated just from these data.
Yes - all I'm looking at is the calculations that go from the structure to the radius, i.e. the inverse of what you said! Given the radius and the 4 important structural values (number of atoms in the body of the cell, N
body, number of atoms on a face of the cell, N
face, number of atoms on an edge of the cell, N
edge, and number of atoms on the corners of the cell, N
corner) how do you then work out the edge length, face diagonal length and body diagonal length?
In the real world, I presume you would use these features and then a rearrangement of the method I ask for to solve for radius instead of the other way round (i.e. to solve for the lengths in terms of the radius is what I want to learn).