Literary lessons is what you should put, because that's what you need with a question like that.
Assuming that both pieces of paper weigh the same, a crumpled piece falls faster in the presence of an atmosphere. In a vacuum, they would fall at the same speed due to the lack of wind resistence.
I have never heard anyone call it 'graph paper' and since it doesn't already have a graph on it, the proper term would be 'graphing paper.'
You would make it on graph paper so you can go by even axis...
Because a flat piece of paper has a larger surface area and therefore more wind resistance. But in a crumbled piece of paper the wind resistance is less.
It is not possible to answer the question since there is no such thing as a "semi graph paper"!
Any plain paper
In Excel, you can set the column width to 2 and display borders around the cells of the number of cells you would like to display on your graph paper, then print.
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The flat paper has more surface area, allowing it to catch more air and float. The crumpled paper on the other hand, does not, because it doesn't have as much surface area to spread the air out.
A normal graph plot one variable against another. If one of these variable has a very rapid rate of growth it would quickly disappear off the graph. If you used a graph large enough to show the entire range you would lose much of the detail at the lower end. Using a log or semi-log graph reduces the rate of change whilst still allowing you to represent the relationship between the variables. You can see an example of log graph paper using the lnk in the related links section below.
I would use some crumpled up tissue paper like you would for christmas presents. They come in different colors and go with almost every theme!
You can use graph paper