50-100
The question is implying, and we have to assume, that the 500 sheets are packed togetherwithout any air or space of any kind between the individual sheets; the package is equivalentto a solid brick of paper material that's 44.5 mm high.44.5 mm = 4.45 cmVolume of the brick = (28 x 21 x 4.45) = 2,616.6 cm3Density = (mass) / (volume) = (2,090) / (2,616.6) = 0.7987 gm/cm3 (rounded)
Ten reams of paper, at 8.5 centimetres tall each, would measure 8.5 x 10 = 85 centimetres.Each sheet of paper within a ream would measure 8.5 / 500 = 0.017 centimetres, or 1.7 millimetres.
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The holes underground collapses while the ground shakes, leaving a stack.
A stack of thylakoids inside the cholorplast of a plant cell. A stack of thylakoid membrane structure
A stack of papers.
MAGIC!
24 or 25 sheets of paper can be called a quire of paper.
500
A collection of paper is commonly referred to as a stack or a pile.
The standard collective noun for sheets is a pad of sheets, which refers to sheets of paper. There is no specific collective noun for sheets used for bedding, in which case a noun suitable for the situation is used; for example a stack of sheets or a bundle of sheets.
Most of us shuffle paper to introduce a bit of air between the sheets. This air lets the paper sheets shift some with respect to each other, and we can then get them "lined up" by grasping the stack of papers and tapping the stack on an edge. In commercial printing, a stack of paper is sometimes called a lift of paper, and the pressman will fan the lift of paper to line it up before loading it into the in-feed end of a press. The printer fans that lift of paper to get it to line up and them stacks it on the in-feed table.
This cannot be done very accurately. However, take enough sheets to make a stack sufficiently high to correspond with the length of the metre rule. Divide the number of sheets by a metre. That will give you the fraction of a metre that one sheet makes.
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
The cost of a stack of paper can vary depending on the size, quality, and quantity of the paper. On average, a ream of standard printer paper containing 500 sheets typically costs around $5-10. Specialized paper or larger quantities may cost more.
The simple way is with a screw micrometer, just put the paper in, do up the jaws with the ratchet and there is your answer. I would measure in a few places and average the results for best accuracy. If you don't happen to have a screw micrometer you could get a rough answer by measuring a stack of paper (say a ream of 500 sheets) with a ruler and dividing the answer by the number of sheets.
Using good quality 24 pound paper, a one inch thick stack is about 215 sheets. Using the more common 20 pound paper - popular in schools - one inch is about 250 sheets.