0.61
6 cm tall
7.5 cm
Six pennies (copper coated steel) equal 0,972 cm.
A US penny (US $0.01 coin) is 1.55 mm thick, so multiplying that by 15, a stack of 15 pennies is 23.25 mm or 2.325 cm tall
To determine how many pennies it would take to build a tower that is 5 cm tall, we first need to know the thickness of a penny. A standard U.S. penny is approximately 1.52 mm thick. Therefore, to convert 5 cm to mm, we get 50 mm. Dividing 50 mm by 1.52 mm per penny gives us about 32.89, meaning it would take approximately 33 pennies to reach a height of 5 cm.
6 cm tall
Ten pennies would be around 14.3 millimetres thick.
7.5 cm
200 cm
Six pennies (copper coated steel) equal 0,972 cm.
Ten millimetres? I guess?
The answer is 1,500 centimeters
Ellen Ten Damme is 164 cm.
Jochum ten Haaf is 173 cm.
To calculate the number of pennies needed to build a tower 1 cm tall, we first need to determine the volume of a single penny. A typical penny has a diameter of 19.05 mm and a thickness of 1.52 mm, resulting in a volume of approximately 4.55 cubic mm. To convert this to cubic cm, we divide by 1000, yielding 0.00455 cubic cm per penny. Since the tower is 1 cm tall, we would need approximately 220 pennies (1 cm / 0.00455 cm) to build a tower of that height.
210 cm tall.
If they are stacked up, each penny on its rim: 1.8cm * 75 pennies = 135 cm ≈ 53.15 inch ≈ 4.43 ft. Answer: 135 cm