a million nickels
A billion (one thousand million) is equal to: * the number of cubic millimeters in a cubic meter * the number of pennies needed to equal 10 million dollars * the number of dollar bills in a stack of bills almost 16 miles high * the number of American nickels in 200,000 tonnes of nickels * one seventh of the humans on Earth * half the number of bacteria on your skin
The US and Canada are the only two major countries to call their 5¢ coins "nickels".US nickels:According to the US Mint, nickels are 1.95 mm thick. A US inch is equivalent to 25.4 mm so 100 inches are 2540 mm. Dividing those two numbers, 2540/1.95 = 1302.56, so you'd need 1303 US nickels to make a stack at least 100 inches tall.Canadian nickels:Canadian nickels are 1.76 mm thick. 2540 mm / 1.76 mm = 1443.182, so you'd need 1444 Canadian nickels for the same stack.
Approximately 358.33 feet tall.
To Pluto & back
It depends on how many dollar bills you have! Lacking that variable, one US dollar is 0.0043 inches thick. So, a stack of one million dollars is about 358 feet four inches high.
Nickels, dimes are only slightly smaller in height than nickels.
825,305 of them.
100 nickels make a stack 6.25 inches high. A nickel is 1/16 inches thick.
17 million one-dollar bills would stack to about 6,091.67 feet high.
if the nickels are stacked on top of each other, the stack will become 10mm higher with every nickel so 50 nickels could be 500mm high
US nickels are 1.95 mm thick. A stack of 6 would be 6*1.95 = 11.7 mm high.
Based on the research done here (http://www.cockeyed.com/inside/million/million.html) A million dollars worth of $100 bills makes a stack about 40 inches high! If you do the math, that means a Billion is 3,333 feet high and a trillion dollars would make a stack over 3 million feet tall or roughly 630 miles high!!!
The answer depends on 6.5 million what, and in what units. A stack in 50 pounds notes will be different from a stack for the same amount in 1 penny coins.
One mile is 1609344 mm. A US nickel is 1.95 mm thick, so a mile-high stack would contain 1609344 / 1.95 = 825,305 coins, rounded to the next-highest whole number. Each nickel is worth 5 cents so the stack's value would be 825305 * 5 = 4126525 cents, or $41,265.25
A US nickel is 1.95 mm thick, so a stack of 6 would be 11.7 mm high.
A billion (one thousand million) is equal to: * the number of cubic millimeters in a cubic meter * the number of pennies needed to equal 10 million dollars * the number of dollar bills in a stack of bills almost 16 miles high * the number of American nickels in 200,000 tonnes of nickels * one seventh of the humans on Earth * half the number of bacteria on your skin
To determine how many nickels are needed to make a stack 100 inches high, we first need to know the thickness of a nickel, which is approximately 1.95 mm or about 0.077 inches. To find the number of nickels needed for 100 inches, divide 100 by 0.077, which gives approximately 1,298. Therefore, you would need about 1,298 nickels to create a stack that is 100 inches tall.