10 carat gold made by plainville stock company.
A coin is made of metal, and like all metals would be a good conductor of both heat and electricity.
First pressure is to be marked by Pa (pascal). Area has to be 10 m2 If so, then force F = P * A = 1000 * 10 = 10000 N
p=momentum m=mass v=speed (in this case, speed of light) therefore, v=c so start off with: p=mv substituting the speed of light you get: p=mc to find "m," use E=mc^2 isolate "m" and substitute it into the momentum equation you get: p=(E/c^2)c p=E/c easy. now you'll need to turn that 140eV energy value into joules. conversion factor is (1.6*10^-19) p=E/c p=(2.24*10^-17)/(3.00*10^8) p=7.4666666666*10^26 and there's your momentum. (you'll need to add units)
Most coins are made of metals and most metals are conductors.
worth in england 10 p
its a mint mark, the letter indicates where the coin was made P = Philadelphia, D = Denver
The Philadelphia mint (where the coin was made).
The P or D denote where the coin was made. P=Philadelphia Pennsylvania, D=Denver Colorado. If by "gold coin" you're referring to the Sacajawea dollar, it's brass, not gold - just golden colored.
A mint-mark on a coin is a letter designating the location of the mint where the coin was made. "D" for Denver, "P" for Philadelphia, "S" for San Francisco.
10 cents. It's an ordinary circulation coin made out of pure nickel.
It's a mintmark, showing which mint made the coin. An S is the San Francisco mint a D is Denver. The P is for Philadelphia and is only on coins made from 1980 to date except the penny it has never had a P mintmark.
It is a medal, not a coin and they are valued from about $10 to $20.
By looking at the coin. Modern coins made for circulation have the mintmarks on the front. P= Philadelphia. D=Denver.
A Philadelphia coin known as a Philadelphia mint is a coint that is made that has a P on it for penny. The Philadelphia mint coin is worth about one sent.
The coin is made from a alloy of silver, copper and manganese
It means the coin was made (minted) in Philadelphia Mint.