The answer will depend on the temperature at which it was 1.5 inch and what the rod is made of.
zero
about 2 lbs. i hope this helped.piglover13Being an area of apparently zero thickness, it weighs nothing.
It would either be a big upside-down ' V ', or else a big upside-down ' U '. The distance from the starting point would start at zero, then it would grown and grow and grow for a while, then stop growing, and then it would shrink and shrink and shrink, until it was zero again.
Zero miles are in an inch because an inch is too small for a mile to fit in
You can read it in decimal as "zero point two five zero". This is equivalent to 0.25 (zero point two five), unless the zero is included intentionally to indicate the accuracy of the measurement. If you happen to remember that 1/4 = 0.25, you can also read this as "a quarter inch" or "one fourth of an inch".
zero point zero nine three in (inch)
None, Zero. A mil is a unit of thickness, not weight. (It's 1/1000 of an inch.)
Year Zero.
0.08 of an inch is commonly expressed as "eighty thousandths of an inch." Alternatively, it can be rounded and referred to as "one-twelfth of an inch" in certain contexts, but the precise term is "eighty thousandths." In decimal form, it's simply pronounced as "zero point zero eight inches."
None. A square inch or air is a measure of area. It has no height at all and so, the volume is zero. A volume of zero cannot contain any particles.
zero
A standard 3.5" floppy disk holds significantly less than a gigabyte. As a fraction, a floppy holds about 1/711 of a gigabyte.