The steel cents of the UK wouldn't melt. But the inside of a US penny is zinc (which melts at about 420°C) and would form a liquid center within the outer copper coating. It would be possible to bend the coins at that point.
It is unknown if any US unmanned space probes have carried pennies to the planet Venus.
1943 cents were made of zinc-coated steel. If you melt it, you'd get less than a penny's worth of metal, even if you could sell such a small quantity.
Venus surface is so hot it could melt led, Lots of space, has been crust
No, the Surface temperature on Venus is between 400 and 500 degrees Celsius, it would melt lead.
the hottest planet is not the planet nearest to the sun, which is mercury. it is venus, the second nearest. it is very hot on venus because, unlike mercury, venus has an atmosphere. the atmosphere acts rather like the windows in a greenhouse, and helps to heat the surface of the planet. the temperature there is about 900 degrees, which i shot enough to melt several metals.
No, a penny can't melt in the sun, as the highest temperature it can make the Earth reach is about 80 Celsius, at that's in deserts.. No, ONLY if it reaches a temperature of 1083 Celsius or more, which is next to impossible!
Your penis
it doesnt melt, but it gets very clean!
It is too hot.The surface temperature could melt lead.
Venus has an atmosphere that is extremely hot, with temperatures reaching up to 900 degrees Fahrenheit. This high temperature could potentially melt lead, a metal with a melting point of 621 degrees Fahrenheit.
A Penny!or a melt value of 1.6723738129 as of 7:41 October 14, 2009 where as the melt value of a penny of 1963-1982 is 1.6642174575
Actually Yes(:
lava