It's one of many security features added to the new bills to help prevent copying them on a printer or scanner.
Unknown at this point. Demand for all denominations is down significantly due to the recession. Even $5 bill production has been zero for part of 2009.
interia keeps going in a straight line but with friction it will slow down
Place the pill in a dollar bill, fold the dollar bill down the middle, and the sides, and on top. Then take anything large or heavy and lightly hit the pill inside of the dollar bill, slide the object over the dollar bill to crush all of the little rocks. Then open the dollar bill, take a card and scrape all of the side of the bill till you have formed a line of powder in the middle of the bill. Then take a straw or roll up another dollar bill tightly, and snort the line. There ya go !
interia keeps going in a straight line but with friction it will slow down
i think the main reason of that is falling of US dollar
yeah but its only got one going straight down the middle.
The sawbuck is a ten dollar bill. Break down the change anyway you want.
The images are ON the bill, not IN the bill. Hold the bill very carefully. Look at each picture and move your eyes down to the bottom of the image where you'll find a caption telling you who or what it is.
well its still a $100 bill but upside down it looks like a 001$
Zero is when its a straight horizontal line It its going neither up or down Infinite is when its a straight vertical line You could say its positive or negative and it will forever going up or down You couldn't give it a slope number
The thickness of the ring can vary depending on the material and design. However, a typical ring might have a thickness of about 2-3mm if fashioned to the width of a dollar bill.
$1. A dollar bill will always be worth $1. it may go down and you need to use a few $1 bills to equal one dollar, but it will always equal one dollar.