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A US one cent coin is 1.55mm thick. Thus a stack of 1,000,000 would be 1,550,000mm, or 1.55 kilometers (0.963 miles) high.A Canadian one cent coin is 1.45mm thick. Thus a stack of 1,000,000 would be 1,450,000mm, or 1.55 kilometers (0.901 miles) high.
if the question allows you to use a scale once, use it in one of 2 ways. 1. Put all stacks of coins on the scale and remove 1 stack at a time, when the weight reaches the the correct amount for the number of stacks are on the scale then then counterfeit has been removed. 2. take 1 coin from stack 1, 2 coins from stack 2, etc. when looking at the numbers if each coin weights, lets say, 1 ounce, and stack 3 is the problem, the scale will read 3 ounces too many. If you can't use a scale, then sorry, your out of luck.
Each coin is 1.95 mm thick so 16 of them would be 16*1.95 = 31.2 mm tall.
A US penny (US $0.01 coin) is 1.55 mm thick, so multiplying that by 15, a stack of 15 pennies is 23.25 mm or 2.325 cm tall
2 millimeters
The British One Pound coin is 3.15mm thick, so 317 or 318 coins should make a metre high stack.
The British One Pound coin is 3.15 mm thick, so a stack of 100 of them would be 315 mm high.
If you think 2D you can stack one coin on top in a row.
approximately 613,712 given that a pound coin is 3.15 mm thick ( 317 in a stack ) and a pound coin has a diameter of 22.5 mm ( 44 stacks across, 44 stacks deep ) 317*44*44= 613,712.
The Romans used large, thick gold coins. Each coin was called an aureus.
A US one cent coin is 1.55mm thick. Thus a stack of 1,000,000 would be 1,550,000mm, or 1.55 kilometers (0.963 miles) high.A Canadian one cent coin is 1.45mm thick. Thus a stack of 1,000,000 would be 1,450,000mm, or 1.55 kilometers (0.901 miles) high.
3.2 kilometers or 1.99 miles. each coin is 3.14mm thick, working in old money that's just under 12 1/2 inches per 100 coins, 3000 coins = 30ft = £528,000 per mile £1,056,000 = 2 miles
Take coin from row with six and stack in on the intersecting row coin.
3 cm
if the question allows you to use a scale once, use it in one of 2 ways. 1. Put all stacks of coins on the scale and remove 1 stack at a time, when the weight reaches the the correct amount for the number of stacks are on the scale then then counterfeit has been removed. 2. take 1 coin from stack 1, 2 coins from stack 2, etc. when looking at the numbers if each coin weights, lets say, 1 ounce, and stack 3 is the problem, the scale will read 3 ounces too many. If you can't use a scale, then sorry, your out of luck.
The thickness of all current circulating dollar coins issued by the US Mint is 2mm.
Each coin is 1.95 mm thick so 16 of them would be 16*1.95 = 31.2 mm tall.