you cannot fold printer paper 8 times barely 6 time. if anyone wants to try it feel free because I'm fed up with it!!!!
If you fold a piece of paper in half, each fold doubles the number of sections. After one fold, there are 2 sections; after two folds, there are 4 sections; after three folds, 8 sections; and so on. Therefore, after 6 folds, you would have 2^6, which equals 64 sections.
A normal piece of paper is about 0.0038 inches thick. So, if the paper were to be folded 50 times, it would become, essentially, 1,125,899,906,842,624 pieces of paper stacked upon one another. Therefore, you would multiply the above number by 0.0038 and that would be 4278419646001.97 inches or 67,525,562.594 miles of paper. So, a normal 8 1/2 by 11 piece of paper folded 50 times would be 67,525,562.594 miles, which is 141 times the distance the Moon is to the Earth.
128
Folding the piece of paper does not change the thickness of the piece of paper. However, the thickness of the folded paper would be twice that of the original sheet of paper.
512
There is no fixed sequence.
1.028"
1048576 2 to the power of 20 is 1048576
When you fold a paper airplane, you are changing its shape and creating aerodynamic forces that allow it to glide through the air more efficiently. The folds give the paper structure and stability, allowing it to maintain its momentum and fly further than a flat sheet of paper that would simply flutter to the ground due to lack of aerodynamics.
It depends, because the paper could be thicker than others.AnswerThe folded paper would be 1 x (250) times as thick as the original sheet as each fold doubles the thicknessAssuming the initial paper is 1/100 of an inch thick the last fold would make a wad of paper almost 200 million miles thick
If you fold a sheet of paper in half 50 times, the final height of the stack would be 70,368,744,177,664 times the original thickness of the paper, or approximately 1.05 x 10^10 meters, which is about 10 billion meters or 10 million kilometers. This distance is more than enough to reach the moon, which is about 384,400 kilometers away from Earth.
Oh, dude, the world record for folding a paper in half is like 12 times. Yeah, that's right, 12! I mean, who has time to fold a piece of paper more than that anyway? It's not like we're trying to set a record here, right?