One bill weighs one gram. $5,000 is fifty $100 bills, for a total weight of fifty grams, or 0.11 pounds.
One hundred thousand is a number and numbers have no weight.
A trillion dollars in one hundred dollar bills would weigh about 11 million pounds, or roughly 5,000 metric tons. The weight of the bills comes from the density of paper currency, which is approximately 1 gram per bill.
The weight would be 22.04 lbs. To explain, US bills weigh one gram. There are 10,000 $100 bills in a million dollars so the total weight would be 10 kg, and a kilo is 2.204 US pounds.
A dollar bill weighs 1 gram A modern dollar coin weighs 8.1 grams
2.2 thousand metric tons
bushels
The answer will depend on the denomination of the notes or coins used!
Morgan and Peace dollars - 26.7 gm Eisenhower dollars - 22.7 gm SBA, Sacagawea, and Presidential dollars - 8.1 gm
You cannot. A gram is a measure of mass, not of weight.
An unworn Morgan dollar has a nominal weight of 26.7 grams. All Morgan dollars (as well as Peace dollars) were struck in an alloy of 90% silver and 10% copper, so they contain about 24.1 gm of pure silver, or about 0.77 troy ounces.
The weight standard for all Morgan dollars is 26.73 grams
A $100 bill weighs 1 gram, so $1 million in $100 bills weighs 1,000,000/100, or 10,000 grams, or 10 kilograms (kg).