First.- 1 USD is made by 20 coins of 5 cents. Then 1,000,000,000 USD is made by 20,000,000,000 coins.
Second.- Considering that each 5 cent coin weights 5 gr., then we have 100,000,000,000 gr = 100,000 metric Tons.
As an example, considering that a Truck Tractor carries 25 metric Tons., we will need 4,000 of them to move that amount of coins.
It depends on the coins' dates. Half dollars from 1964 and earlier weigh 12.5 grams each. 1965-1969 coins weigh 11.5 gm 1971-2008 coins weigh 11.34 gm
Approximately 208 20-cent coins would fit in a liter, based on the volume of a standard 20-cent coin and the volume of a liter.
There are 14 five cent coins in 70 cents.
A ten cent coin weighs around 2.268 grams.
The 1968 one cent coin weighs about 48 grains i.e. about 3.11 grams.
it's possible only if there are 20 cent coins only for that 7 dollars 1 dollar = 100 cents, 100 cents = 5 of 20 cent coins since you need 5 of 20 cent coins for a dollar, you do 7 times of it. 7 X 5 = 35. Therefore, you need 35 of 20 cent coins for 7 dollars. (or there are 35 of 20 cent coins in 7 dollars)
$12.75/$0.05 = 255 five cent coins
One way of doing this is with 19 ten-cent coins and 10 one-cent coins.
2% of 1 billion = 1 billion * 2/100 = 20 million dollars.
Which currency are you using? Twenty-cent coins don't exist in the United States anymore.
1 cent, two cent, three cent (two types), half-dimes, dimes, quarters, half-dollars, dollars ( gold & Silver), $20, $10, $5, and $2.50 gold coins.
40
To determine the combination of Australian coins that add up to 200 grams in weight, we need to consider the weights of different coins in circulation. The most common coins are the 5 cent (2.83g), 10 cent (5.65g), 20 cent (11.3g), 50 cent (15.55g), and 1 dollar (9g) coins. To reach a total weight of 200 grams, we could have various combinations such as 20 x 10 cent coins, 10 x 20 cent coins, or a mix of different denominations that add up to 200 grams.
25 of course !
10,000 pennies
5
To make 5 dollars with 100 coins, you can use a combination of coins that add up to 500 cents (since 5 dollars equals 500 cents). For example, you could have 50 quarters (each worth 25 cents), which totals 12.50 dollars, but that exceeds 100 coins. Instead, you could use a mix of 1-dollar coins, 50-cent coins, and lower denominations, ensuring that the total number of coins is 100 while their total value sums to 500 cents. A simple combination could be 95 one-cent coins and 5 five-cent coins.