A piece of paper can be folded ten times by simply following the simple procedure in a simple way which is simply given below.
OR GO TO http://www.pomonahistorical.org/12times.htm FOR A NOT SWEAT SOLUTION
In mathematical terms it is simple. In physical terms it is very difficult - for two related reasons.
Having said that, there have been successful attempts. In late 2011 students from St. Mark's School in Southborough, Massachusetts succeeded in folding a paper in half 13 times. They used toilet paper!
The paper stack doubles in size with each fold and the shape around the fold become more rounded, making it harder and harder to bend. No toilet roll is long enough to fold thirteen times, so they had to tape together lots of toilet rolls until they had a stretch more than 1 kilometre long.
The final result was a 1.5-metre wide and 76-centimetre high wad comprising 8192 layers of paper.
You can fold a piece of paper 12 times.
114 times
The myth is no matter how big the paper is, if it is folded exactly in half it cannot be folded 8 times although this has been proved wrong by many including the mythbusters.
1. Take an A4 piece of paper and fold it in half. 2. Write you name on it somewhere. 3. Fold it in half again. 4. Fold it again in half. 5. Then turn the paper around and fold it in half. 6. Fold it again in half. 7. Write a name of something that makes you happy on it 8. Fold it in half again. 9. Fold it again in half. 10. Then turn the paper around and fold it in half. 11. Fold it again in half. 12. Write today’s date on it. 13. Fold it again in half. 14. Unfold all of the folds. 15. Screw it up into a ball. 16. Throw it in the bin.
10 times 1000
I'm not totally sure what's being asked here, but I'll take a shot at something and see if I hit anything. What we know: * An 8 x 10 piece of paper weighs 9.8 grams. * A cut-out of a leaf is 20 square inches. The 8 x 10 paper has an area of 8 x 10 = 80 square inches. The cut-out is only 20 square inches. What fractional part of the whole paper is the cut-out? Just divide 20 by 80: 20/80 = 1/4 = 0.25 So, the area of the cut-out is about one quarter the area of the whole paper, so we can calculate the weight of the cut-out by multiplying 0.25 by 9.8 grams: 0.25 x 9.8 = 2.45 grams
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The eye-piece multiplied by the power of the lens Eye-piece: 10 lens : 50 500x magnification
Fold it 10 times....
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.
A square paper can not be folded more than seven times.
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.
1. Take an A4 piece of paper and fold it in half. 2. Write you name on it somewhere. 3. Fold it in half again. 4. Fold it again in half. 5. Then turn the paper around and fold it in half. 6. Fold it again in half. 7. Write a name of something that makes you happy on it 8. Fold it in half again. 9. Fold it again in half. 10. Then turn the paper around and fold it in half. 11. Fold it again in half. 12. Write today’s date on it. 13. Fold it again in half. 14. Unfold all of the folds. 15. Screw it up into a ball. 16. Throw it in the bin.
Somewhere in the vicinity of 10 or 11, depending on how large and (more importantly) how thin the paper is. A lot of people claim seven. The TV show Mythbusters took a very large sheet of paper and folded it ten times to prove that was not correct. Note that the tenth fold is essentially trying to fold a ream... those thick packages you buy copier paper in at the office supply store.
1.028"
You will be needing a square piece of paper. 1. Fold paper in half 2. Open back up 3. Rotate paper 90 degrees 4. Fold in half again 5. Open back up 6. Take any corner and fold it to middle point 7. Do the same for the 3 remaining corners 8. Flip paper over 9. Do the same thing again 10. Fold in half 11. Rotate and fold in half again 12. Flip paper over 13. Put your left hand's thumb into upper left corner flap 14. Same thing for other thumb 15. Do same thing again for fingers You have completed your paper fortune teller.
it means an increase or decrease by 10 times.
As a Wiccan, I understand the concept of "100 fold" more than most. It is not the multiplication of a number times 100, as most assume it is. However, it is doubling whatever number 100 times. Imagine your number is a piece of paper. You fold it in half one time. Fold it again a second time. If your number is one, then two fold would be 4. Or, more simply, 2 to the 100th power. So, to answer your question, 100 fold is... 1,267,650,600,228,229,401,496,703,205,376 Which to say is a really, really, really big number. LOL *********** The above answer is NOT true. Merriam-Webster and other dictionaries cite tenfold or hundredfold as 10 units or 10x something (or 100 units or 100x some other number).--jhh
yes the moon is 238,857 miles away whereas a piece of paper folded 50 times reaches over 200,000,000 miles so it would reach the moon (and then some) Edit: A piece of paper (lets use metric for this) is approx 0.1mm thick. Folding it 50 times will create a bundle (2^50)/10 mm thick, which is (1.12589907x10^15)/10 mm, or 1.12589907x10^14. Lets convert it to kilometers, through each step. Cm : 1.12589907x10^13 (divide by 10) M : 1.12589907x10^11 (divide by 100) Km : 1.12589907x10^8 (divide by 1000) So, the paper would be 1.12589907x10^8 km thick. The distance from the Earth to the Sun is only 1.496x10^8km. Therefore, the paper would reach the majority of the way to the Sun... it beat the moon by a long shot. Plus, if the paper were slightly thicker, (eg 0.11mm) it would reach, or even pass, the Sun quite easily.
If you need to mail 10 sheet of paper, you need to put two stamps on the package. You can fold it in an envelope or put it in a manila envelope.