The US Mint lists the following weights:
Cent - 2.5 gm
Nickel - 5.0 gm
Dime - 2.27 gm
Quarter - 5.67 gm
Half - 11.34 gm
"Golden" dollar - 8.1 gm
According to the US Mint, the quarter is heaviest. Current weights: Quarter - 5.67 gm Nickel - 5.00 gm Dime - 2.27 gm
dime
a nickel is not bigger than a penny its the same size
They are all mostly copper so they should conduct close to the same.
The density of anything can be found using m/v=d. where m is mass, v is volume, and d is density. therefore you find the volume of the coin (whether it be penny, nickel, dime, quarter, or peso) and then mass the coin on a balance and work the problem out.
According to the US Mint, the quarter is heaviest. Current weights: Quarter - 5.67 gm Nickel - 5.00 gm Dime - 2.27 gm
A penny is 1/5 of a nickel, 1/10 of a dime, 1/25 of a quarter and 1/100 of a dollar. A nickel is 1/2 of a dime, 1/5 of a quarter and 1/20 of a dollar. A dime is 2/5 of a quarter and 1/10 of a dollar. A quarter is 1/4 of a dollar.
By far it is the penny.
Yes, you can make seventy-four cents with nine coins: quarter, quarter, dime, nickel, nickel, penny, penny, penny, penny
dime
A quarter, a nickel, a dime, and a penny is only 41 cents ... not enough to make 75 cents in even one way.
15.438 grams.
yes
Penny, nickel, dime, quarter, half dollar, dollar.
91/100 91%
The answer is three quarter's, one nickel's dime and a penny!
1%, 5%, 10%, 25% respectively.