It would remain 1mm thick.
You can't fold a piece of paper 50 times
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.
It would be higher than the himayala mountain because everytime you fold a sheet of paper it will be double the size of itself.
512
Yes, you can fold laminated paper, but it may not fold easily or smoothly due to its stiff and rigid nature. The laminate can crack or break along the fold line, especially if the paper is thick or heavily laminated. For best results, consider using a scoring technique to create a more defined fold without damaging the laminate.
It would take 42 times to fold an average 8.5 by 11 piece of paper to reach the moon!<3
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.
If you could hypothetically fold a standard sheet of paper 100 times, it would be about 1x10^30 meters thick, which is significantly thicker than the observable universe. This calculation involves exponential growth and is practically impossible to achieve due to physical limitations.
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 could somehow fold a paper in half 50 times, it would be so thick that it would exceed the distance from the Earth to the Sun. This is due to the exponential growth in thickness with each fold. In reality, it is physically impossible for a paper to be folded 50 times due to limitations in material strength and size.
You can't fold a piece of paper 50 times
If you fold a piece of paper in half 50 times, you would get a stack of paper so thick that it would reach the sun and back multiple times, with a thickness much larger than the observable universe. It's a theoretical concept as it exceeds physical limits.
Depends how you fold it, but if you fold in such a way that each folding doubles the thickness, that would be 2 to the power 103 times the thickness of a single sheet. (You CAN'T do that with any real paper.)
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.
If you fold a piece of paper in half, it doubles in thickness. Therefore, if you fold a piece of paper 42 times, it would be 2^42 layers thick, which is an incredibly large number and practically impossible to achieve in reality due to physical limitations.
It would be higher than the himayala mountain because everytime you fold a sheet of paper it will be double the size of itself.
Fold it 10 times....