no
It depends. If the piece of paper is 1 micron wide and 10 kilometres long, it will have an area of 0.01 sq metres but I would not be able to write anything on paper that narrow. Or, worse, it could be 1 nanometre wide and 10,000 km long and still have an area of 0.01 sq metres!
Square metres. Square centimetres for small objects like a sheet of paper, square kilometres for a town or lake.
A sheet of A4 paper has an area of 1/16 square metres. Its dimensions are approximately 297 mm x 210 mm.
A4 is a standard paper size (1/16 square metres). The standard for printer paper is 80 gsm (grams per square metre). An 80 gsm sheet of A4 paper weighs 5 grams.
Square kilometres for lakes or towns, square metres for rooms or gardens, square centimetres for pictures or sheets of paper are some common units and the magnitudes that they would be used to measure.
It depends. If the piece of paper is 1 micron wide and 10 kilometres long, it will have an area of 0.01 sq metres but I would not be able to write anything on paper that narrow. Or, worse, it could be 1 nanometre wide and 10,000 km long and still have an area of 0.01 sq metres!
Weigh it in grams and divide by its area measured in square metres.
Square metres. Square centimetres for small objects like a sheet of paper, square kilometres for a town or lake.
A4 paper is 210 × 297 mm. It has an area of 1/16 square metres. It is one of a series of paper sizes starting with A0, which has an area of 1 square metre.
A sheet of A4 paper has an area of 1/16 square metres. Its dimensions are approximately 297 mm x 210 mm.
A4 is a standard paper size (1/16 square metres). The standard for printer paper is 80 gsm (grams per square metre). An 80 gsm sheet of A4 paper weighs 5 grams.
Very easily.
The address of the Newtown Square Historical is: Saint Davids & Paper Mill Rd, Newtown Square, PA 19073
Square kilometres for lakes or towns, square metres for rooms or gardens, square centimetres for pictures or sheets of paper are some common units and the magnitudes that they would be used to measure.
Imagine a square of paper (or carpet, lino, metal....whatever) which measures just about 173cm along each side. That square of material is 3 square metres in size. That's how much :o)
The answer depends on the shape of the 33m². If, for example, it is 150 metres of 0.22 metres, you will not get a single A3 size print from it because the shape is not wide enough. An A3 sheet of paper has an area of 1/8 square metres (A0 is 1 m²). So the maximum number of sheets you could get, if it was the right shape, would be 33 x 8 = 264 prints.
If the paper is in inches then 11 times 14 = 154 square inches