You can fold a sheet of notebook paper 6 or 7 times but no more.♥adrianna Nicole lockwood wrote this♥
Impossible question to answer. No piece of paper can be folded more than seven times. Most, no more than 5. Depending on how you fold, anywhere from 10 to 512 with the limitation implied above.
Any symmetrical figure has two halves that match. By definition, you cannot have more than two halves of a figure.
nope ive tried it :( multiple times....Well, it depends on what you mean. Of course you can fold a piece of paper lots of times. What you can not do is fold a piece of paper in half lots of times.Your typical piece of paper is about 0.1mm thick. Each fold in half doubles the thickness, so by the time you have folded it 7 times it is 2^7*0.1 mm thick, that's 12.8mm, call it 1/2 an inch thick. And by then your piece of paper is rather small. If it started 8 1/2 x 11, it is now 11/8 x 17/8 inches, or about 1 1/2 inches by 2 inches. (ignoring the size of he folds)The next fold would make it 1 inch thick, and the outside of the fold would be a half circle 1/2 inch radius using pi/2 inches of paper, call it 1 1/2 inches. This isn't going to work.
A circle's circumference is pi times its diameter (more commonly 2*pi*radius) so 7.5 times pi equals 23.56 inches.
No
Yes, but you can't fold it in half more than 7 times
A square paper can not be folded more than seven times.
You can fold a sheet of notebook paper 6 or 7 times but no more.♥adrianna Nicole lockwood wrote this♥
You can. The present record is 12 times
It's theoretically impossible to fold a standard piece of paper more than seven to eight times due to physical constraints. As the number of folds increases, the thickness of the paper grows exponentially, making it impossible to fold any further.
It is mathematically and physically impossible to fold a single sheet of printer paper in half more than 7 times. This is because each additional fold increases the thickness exponentially, making it increasingly difficult to fold further. Folded more than 7 times, the paper would become too thick to fold cleanly.
Impossible question to answer. No piece of paper can be folded more than seven times. Most, no more than 5. Depending on how you fold, anywhere from 10 to 512 with the limitation implied above.
34 8x4=32 and 4 .5's (or halves) are 2 more.
Yes. You can. If you fold it, turn 90 degrees and fold it again. I saw it on myth busters. They folded a paper the size of a football field 11 times. with the help from NASA. But with a regular 11x8 paper, i don't think it is possible.
To divide a circle into fifths, you would start by drawing a horizontal line through the center of the circle to create two equal halves. Then, draw another line perpendicular to the first line to divide the circle into quarters. Next, draw a line at a 72-degree angle from the horizontal line to create one-fifth of the circle. Repeat this step four more times, each time rotating the angle by 72 degrees to divide the circle into fifths.
Any symmetrical figure has two halves that match. By definition, you cannot have more than two halves of a figure.