According to The United states Mint website, a US quarter is 24.26 mm in diameter and the thickness of the coin is 1.75 millimeters.
To find the area of a circle the formula is pi*r^2
so the face of a quarter has an area of pi*(24.26/2)2 = 462.244204 mm2.
To then find the volume we multiple the area of the face by the thickness,
so the volume is 462.244204 * 1.75 or pi * (24.26/2)2 * 1.75= 808.927357mm3.
So the volume of a us quarter is about 808.93 mm3. This does not take into account the ridging on the edge of the coin or the printing on the face.
It sounds as if you're asking the volume of a roll of quarters.
There are 40 quarters in a roll.
Each quarter's volume is pi x radius2 x thickness.
The total is 40 x 3.1416 x 12.13 x 12.13 x 1.75 mm3.
Or 32357 mm3 or 32.4 cm3 or 1.97 in3.
Length mass is approximately 1.2 c. Mass is approximately something no one cares.
The thickness of a quarter is 1.75 mm or 0.069 inches. A quarter is worth 25 cents and has a mass of 5.67 g.
This is the reduction of volume to one-third.
A "quarter" of cocaine is one quarter (1/4) of an ounce.
Well first you would take, for example, the quarter and weigh it. Then divide it's weight by acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s). Make sure you use a metric measurement for weight. Now find the volume. For something like a quarter the easiest way to do this is to drop it in some water and measure the amount of water it displaces. You can do this by using something like a graduated cylinder. Then convert from liters to cubic meters(1 liter=.001 cub meters) so just weigh it then find the volume
There is no specific measurement as a quarter - that depends what it is a quarter of.
For a US 25 cent coin,Mass = 5.67 gramsVolume = 808.9 mm3
Coins are not cylinders. The rim of the coin is sometimes raised, as well there are depressions and peaks from the design of the coin. You should use a specific gravity test with water and a scale. bullionultrasound shows how to measure the volume of an American Gold Eagle coin using the specific gravity method, how to calculate density, etc... it's pretty informative. According to The United states Mint website, a US quarter is 24.26 mm in diameter and the thickness of the coin is 1.75 millimeters. To find the area of a circle the formula is pi*r^2 so the face of a quarter has an area of pi*(24.26/2)2 = 462.244204 mm2. To then find the volume we multiple the area of the face by the thickness, so the volume is 462.244204 * 1.75 or pi * (24.26/2)2 * 1.75= 808.927357mm3. So the volume of a us quarter is about 808.93 mm3. This does not take into account the ridging on the edge of the coin or the printing on the face.
Because it's one-fourth, or a quarter, of a dollar.
Assuming American coinage, the two coins would be a 25 cent coin and a 5 cent coin. Assuming non-American coins, one is not a 10 cent coin, but the other one is. The other coin being a 20 cent coin.
A quarter and a nickel. The quarter is the coin that's not a nickel!
Australia does not have a "Quarter" coin.
Australia does not have a "quarter" coin.
A dime is a five cent coin. A quarter is a twenty five cent coin. It therefore takes five dimes to make a quarter.
The coin is a common quarter so spend it.
The Royal Mint does not produce a "quarter" coin.
The British have never issued a "quarter" coin.
The Standing Liberty quarter is an American coin that was produced from 1916 to 1930. A quarter is a coin worth 25 cents. Information about the Standing Liberty quarter can be found on Wikipedia.