A vertical fold is a fold that is straight up, example:If you fold a piece of paper in half vertically it will make avertical fold.(The answerer: thank you for asking, I love helping people)
fold
It is physically impossible to fold a piece of paper in half more than 8 times. However, assuming you could do it (though it would be easier to cut the pile so far in half and put one half on top of the other), then: After 1 fold the stack has 2 sheets After 2 folds the stack has 4 sheets After 3 folds the stack has 8 sheets After n folds the stack has 2^n sheets After 50 folds the stack will be 2⁵⁰ sheets thick As each sheet is 0.1mm, the stack will be: 2⁵⁰ × 0.1 mm = 112589990684262.4 mm thick = 112589990.6842624 km thick ≈ 1.126 × 10¹¹ m thick
1.028"
To see this more clearly, take a piece of paper that is rectangular in shape and fold in half from top to bottom. When you unfold you will see the crease through the middle of the paper and notice that both halves are symmetrical, meaning mirror images of each other, and identical in size and shape. Now, fold the paper in half again from left to right. When you unfold you will see a second crease, forming a cross over the first. The two creases represent the two lines of symmetry. Note: Technically a square is also a rectangle, but has 4 lines of symmetry since you can also divide a square into symmetrical shapes from the corners, or on the diagonal.
If you fold a piece of paper in half 4 times, there will be 16 sections. Each time you fold the paper in half, the number of sections doubles. So, if you start with 1 section and fold it in half 4 times, you will end up with 16 sections.
3 times 1st step is fold paper in half 2nd fold it again in half and 3rd fold it a third time in half. open it an u get eight equal sections
512
If you take a single sheet and fold it in half 8 times, the pack will have 64 layers.
The answer is 3...he folded it 3 times. Here is how to solve. One fold gives you two sections...1x2=2; each time you fold it doubles the amount of sections, so take your first answer...2...and multiply that by 2. 2x2=4. keep multiplying your answer by 2 until you get to the desired number of sections. 4x2=8.
You can't fold a piece of paper 50 times
It is generally believed that an A4 piece of paper can be folded in half approximately seven to eight times due to the thickness of the paper increasing with each fold, making it increasingly difficult to fold further.
When you fold a paper in half 5 times, you will get 32 squares. Each time you fold the paper in half, the number of squares doubles.
Fold the paper in half.
Get a square piece of paper. Fold it into a triangle (diagnol half) two times.Then, fold it 3 times. Then,fold the little thing in, and you're done.
In half each time, is very unlikely.
You can fold a paper in half, no matter how big or thin, 8-10 times. Even orgami paper.The current record is 12 times.