Depending upon which way you lay the coins: a 5p has a thickness of 1.7mm and a diameter of 18.0mm 1 mile = 1,609,344 mm (exactly) → if the coins are laid on heads/tails it will require 1,609,344 mm ÷ 18.0 mm/coin = 89,408 coins → if the coins are laid on edge it will require 1,609,344 mm ÷ 1.7 mm/coin = 946,672 16/17 coins ≈ 946,672.9 coins; 946,673 coins laid on their edge will be 0.1mm longer than 1 mile.
Coins themselves aren't magnetic because they're not magnetized. However some coins are attracted to a magnet because they're made of metals like nickel or steel. Examples include:Most modern Canadian coinsBritish 1p, 2p, 5p and 10p coins made since 2012US 1¢ coins dated 1943EU 1, 2, and 5 cent coinsWhile many other coins around the world contain nickel, it's usually alloyed with significant amounts of copper (usually 75% or 80%), which prevents these coins from being attracted to a magnet.
From 2011 yes
The 5p orbital.
5p
80 5p coins.
5p+5p
18 5p coins make 90p.
150p/5p = 30 of them
2000
27
200.5p coins go into 10 pounds
There are 140 of 5p coins in £7
10, obviously.
6p and 5p are the coins
how many ways to make 25p using 1p 2p 5p 10p 20 coins
Ten 1p coins Eight 1p coins 2p coin Six 1p coins two 2p coins Four 1p coins three 2p coins Two 1p coins four 2p coins. Two 5p coins One 5p coin two 2p coins one 1p coin One 5p coin one 2p coin three 1p coins One 5p coin five 1p coins Five 2p coins One 10p coin