Depends on the thickness of the paper.
Measure the thickness in decimals of an inch and multiply that by 40.
A sheet of standard copy paper is about .004 in thick. 100 sheets would therefore have a thickness of about 0.4 in. Modern, lightweight paper sold for home printing is much thinner and 500 sheets have a thickness of 1" approx. So, 100 sheets would be about 0.2 in.
.1250 inches or 3.18 mm
A normal piece of paper is about 0.0038 inches thick. So, if the paper were to be folded 50 times, it would become, essentially, 1,125,899,906,842,624 pieces of paper stacked upon one another. Therefore, you would multiply the above number by 0.0038 and that would be 4278419646001.97 inches or 67,525,562.594 miles of paper. So, a normal 8 1/2 by 11 piece of paper folded 50 times would be 67,525,562.594 miles, which is 141 times the distance the Moon is to the Earth.
A Ream is a measure of the NUMBER of sheets of paper (500 sheets) How thick that would be will depend on the weight of the paper. Heavier paper is thicker.
1.028"
It would remain 1mm thick.
You would still have 36 inches - but it would be in six pieces of 6 inches each !
A 500 sheet ream is 2 inches thick (I just now measured a package of photocopy paper). So approximately 250 pages of standard paper would stack up to 1 inch.
the ice for to have 1500 pounds on would have to be 8-12 inches thick so 1150 Ibs might need 6-8 inches thick
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.
Two pieces, one 9 inches long and the other 45 inches long. If you meant: How many pieces of ribbon 9 inches long can be cut from a piece 54 inches long, then: 54 inches ÷ 9 inches/piece = 6 pieces.
Depends of the thickness of the paper. Say the paper were 0.004" thick, then the answer would be: (12*12*12)/(8.5*11*0.004) = 4620.32 sheets