The diameter of an Australian Dollar coin is 25 mm. Do the maths.
The radius is 1/2 of the circumference.
$40,000 Australian Dollars $40,000 Australian Dollars
The circumference of an 8-inch circle is: 25.1 inches.
Circumference of a circle = 2*pi*radius or diameter*pi
Since 1992 when the 2¢ and 1¢ coins were phased out, there are only five coins of value $1 or less in circulation in Australia: $1, 50¢, 20¢, 10¢ and 5¢. This means that there are exactly 50 ways to make a dollar out of change. The common trivia answer of 293 ways only applies to the U.S. system which has pennies and quarters. If Australia had pennies, there would be 364 ways to make a dollar (slightly larger than the U.S. answer because the 20¢ coin can be utilised in more combinations than the quarter). Prior to 1992, the correct answer was a whopping 4,583 ways to make a dollar! In fact 2¢ and 1¢ coins are still legal tender, so this answer could still be regarded as correct.
100 cents = 1 Australian dollar
1 Australian dollar is worth 1.06 Dollar in US
As of 30th June 2009: 1 Australian Dollar = 0.81 US DOllars 1 US Dollar = 1.24 Australian Dollars
December 1, 2010: 1 danish krone = 0.1822 Australian dollar. 1 Australian dollar = 5,4884 danish kroner.
1 Australian Dollar is currently worth .69 Euro
As of 31/03/2013 1 Australian Dollar is worth around6.46429Chinese Yuan Renminbi
1 Australian Dollar = 92 Tahiti currency
1 Australian dollar = 1.0264 US.
1 US Dollar is equal to about 1.08 Australian Dollars
Roughly 1 to 1. Currently one Australian dollar is equal to 1.06 US Dollars. But that is subject to change.
1 US dollar = 0,96877 Australian dollar ( official conversion, today 10.02.2013)
See the link to - Universal Currency Converter