The volume is 2.5439333 cm
³.
The US one-cent coin is 0.750 inches in diameter and 0.061 inches thick,for a volume of 0.027 cubic inches.The UK plated-steel penny (one new pence) is 20.32 mm in diameter and 1.65 mm thick, for a volume of 0.535 cm3 or about 0.033 cubic inches.(see related question)
0.02196855 cubic inches
A penny is a unit if currency (money), thus one penny means one unit/coin of this currency (1p).
One penny is one percent of one dollar in United States currency.
The coin that is not a penny is a quarter. The other one IS a penny.
It has 0.35cm3
its weight divided by its volume. the volume is the circumference times thickness
The US one-cent coin is 0.750 inches in diameter and 0.061 inches thick,for a volume of 0.027 cubic inches.The UK plated-steel penny (one new pence) is 20.32 mm in diameter and 1.65 mm thick, for a volume of 0.535 cm3 or about 0.033 cubic inches.(see related question)
0.02196855 cubic inches
The current British Penny (1992 to present) is - 20.3mm in diameter (radius = 10.15mm) and is 1.65mm thick (height). Volume = Height x Pi (Radius x Radius) Volume = 1.65 x 3.14 (10.15 x 10.15) Therefore the volume is a smidgeon greater than 534 cubic mm.
When an object of volume V is submerged in a liquid, the object experiences an upward force equal to the weight of the fluid it has displaced (the weight of a volume V of fluid). Oil is less dense than water (the oil floating on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico after the Deep Horizon catastrophe is an example of this), so a given volume of oil weighs less than the same volume of water. This means that a penny of volume V submerged in oil feels the weight of gravity pushing it down, and the weight of a volume V of oil pushing it up. The upward weight pushing the penny up is less in oil than in water, so the penny will sink faster in water, theoretically.
One old penny would by one penny lolly
You can get a stack of pennies, measure the height of the stack and then divide by the number of pennies. You can also get the thickness by treating the penny as a cylinder, calculating the area of the face of the penny, then putting a whole lot of them in water, measuring the change of volume to get the total volume of all pennies, then divide by the number of pennies and divide again by the area of the penny to get the thickness.
A penny will not float in water, mainly because it is denser than water. When the penny is placed in water, it displaces a volume of water equal to its own volume. Since the penny weighs more than the water it displaces, it will sink.So, in order for the penny to float, you must find a liquid that is denser than solid copper -- or whatever metal or alloy a penny is made of. Mercury -- which is a liquid at room temperature -- is denser than copper. Hence, a penny will float in mercury.Possibly surface tension may allow it to float.
One of them is not a penny but the other one is! One nickel and one penny. Trick question. The other one is a penny.
Not knowing what size garbage can do the following. Calculate volume of penny. Calculate volume of garbage can. Divide A into B
it is unknown becasue of the change of pennys evry year