Better write the number in scientific notation, to avoid us (those who answer) the trouble of counting all those zeroes.
Also, gram is a unit of mass, not of weight.
== == * a snow petrel weighs 454 grams * a can of baked beans weighs 420 grams
4,5 grams
Each United States nickel weighs 5 grams. Gather 20 nickels and you will have something that weighs exactly 100 grams
Anything above five grams.
1 cellphone.
The British Sixpence - from 1953 to 1967 weighs 2.83 grams from 1947 to 1952 weighs 2.83 grams from 1937 to 1946 weighs 2.827 grams from 1920 to 1936 weighs 2.876 grams from 1838 to 1920 weighs 3.01 grams from 1816 to 1837 weighs 2.827 grams
== == * a snow petrel weighs 454 grams * a can of baked beans weighs 420 grams
something that weighs 3 grams
what weighs the same as 31 grams of gold
150 grams = 5.3 ounces
Snickers weighs about 5,310 grams.
A US Nickel weighs 5 grams. A penny weighs 2.5.
A us nickel weighs 5 grams. So ten nickels weigh 50 grams
340 grams
646 grams weighs less than 1 kilogram.
An American nickel has a standard weight of 5.0 grams. Three American nickels is equal to 15 grams, three full crayons would also be 15 grams..
A pre-decimal British Penny - (to 1967) weighs 9.45 grams. A British Penny - (1968 - 1991) weighs 3.56 grams. A British Penny - (1992 to present) weighs 3.56 grams. An Australian Penny - (1911 to 1964) weighs 9.45 grams. An New Zealand Penny - (1940 to 1964) weighs 9.45 grams. A US 1 cent (Penny) - (to 1982) weighs 3.11 grams. A US 1 cent (Penny) - (1982 to present) weighs 2.5 grams. Select one and multiply by 2,000.