Sixty-two cent may imply 62/100ths of a carat.
1 cent = 2 milligram 1 carat = 200 milligram 1 carat = 100 cents 1 gram = 5 carats
Your figure 0.005 represents 005/100ths of a carat.
1 carat = 100 cents = 6.5 mm = solitaire
This is a math question essentially: 100 divided by three equals 33 1/3, and that's the number of three-cent diamonds in a full carat.
One hundred cents make one carat, where cents is an older term for points.
100 per cent gold is the meaning of 24 carat gold.
The weight of a diamond is measured in carats, not in cents. So, a 30 cent diamond would not be equivalent to any specific weight in carats. To determine the carat weight of a diamond, it would need to be weighed using a scale calibrated to measure carats.
A carat is a unit of weight used for gemstones, where 1 carat is equivalent to 100 points. Therefore, 0.18 carats is equal to 18 points. In terms of cents, which is often used in the context of diamonds (where 1 cent equals 100 points), 0.18 carats would be equivalent to 18 cents.
The carat equivalent of 72 cents is .72 carats.
37.2 62 per cent = 62 / 100 = 0.62 60 x 0.62 = 37.2
One cent in the world of diamonds may indicate that the diamond is one-one-hundredth of a carat. Currently, diamonds weighing less than 10/100 carat are considered 'chips', and are not expensive.
The price of every diamond is based on its individual carat weight, colour, cut and clarity. You've only given 14 cent -- referring perhaps to the number of 'points' or hundredths of a carat, on a cut and polished diamond.