Those completely depend on the scale you choose.
Sadly, that important piece of data is not mentioned
in the question.
If the Earth were the size of a marble (1 cm in diameter), the scaled sun would be about 11 meters in diameter (size of a large inflatable pool). However, the distance between the Earth and the sun would be about 100 meters. The scaled Jupiter would be about the size of a grain of sand, and the scaled Pluto would be roughly the size of a speck of dust.
300 cm is about 9.8 feet.
On 1:175,000 scale map one cm on the map represents 175,000 cm (or 1.75 km).
4952800000 cm = 4.9528*109 cmThe diameter of Neptune, in kilometers, is 49528 km. (See http://www.kidzworld.com/article/1404-neptune-the-windy-planet )100000 cm=1 km, so 49528 km=49528 km*100000 cm/km=49528*100000 cm=4952800000 cm = 4.9528*109 cm
Normally if D52 cm is given as a dimension it will mean 52 cm diameter = 20.47244 inches diameter. 1 inch = 2.54 cm Therefore 52/2.54 = 20.47244 inches.
If the Earth were the size of a marble (1 cm in diameter), the scaled sun would be about 11 meters in diameter (size of a large inflatable pool). However, the distance between the Earth and the sun would be about 100 meters. The scaled Jupiter would be about the size of a grain of sand, and the scaled Pluto would be roughly the size of a speck of dust.
It depends on what the 6 cm refer to! The diameter of a shape with a 6 cm diameter is ... surprise!... 6 cm.
Well, honey, if the diameter is 12 cm, all you gotta do is cut that bad boy in half to get the radius. So, the radius would be 6 cm. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
-- There is no such thing as the gravity of all the planets. Each planet has its own number, which is different from any other. -- Gravity can't be described in units of cm.
Diameter = 17/pi cm
Diameter in cm = circumference/pi
radius 5 cm diameter 10 cm
The radius of a circle is the distance from the center of the circle to any point on its circumference. If the radius of a circle is given as 26.4 cm, then that means the distance from the center to the edge of the circle is 26.4 cm. This measurement is constant for any point on the circle, as all points on the circumference are equidistant from the center.
The diameter of a circle when the circumference is 35 cm is: 11.14 cm (circumference divided by Pi = diameter).
The diameter of a circle that has a 33 cm circumference is: 10.5 cm (circumference divided by pi = diameter).
The diameter of a circle if the circumference is 41 cm is about 13.05 cm (C divided by Pi = diameter)
The diameter is 23.99 cm (circumference divided by Pi = diameter).