2^7 = 128
fold mountains form
A Fold (anticline or syncline) - but it is not a fault. A geological Fault is a break in the rock, with the rock on one side moved relative to that on the other..
It depends, because the paper could be thicker than others.AnswerThe folded paper would be 1 x (250) times as thick as the original sheet as each fold doubles the thicknessAssuming the initial paper is 1/100 of an inch thick the last fold would make a wad of paper almost 200 million miles thick
Symetrical line
If the paper is regular in shape (a rectangle, for instance), fold it in half so that opposite edges meet. Then fold it in half the other way. The two fold lines will cross at the center.
If you fold a whole newspaper seven times, you will have 128 layers. Each fold doubles the number of layers, so after seven folds, it will be 2^7 = 128 layers.
Each time you fold paper, the number of layers is doubled.0 folds = 1 layer (original sheet) = 201 fold = 2 layers = 212 folds = 4 layers = 223 folds = 8 layers. = 23...etc, all the way to 50 folds. In other words, the number of layers increases exponentially.Following the pattern, If you could fold paper 50 times, the number of layers would equal:250 or 1,125,899,906,842,624 layers.
As many times as you want or need to. I hoped this helped!!!!!!! Wrong!^You can only fold a piece of paper up to seven times, no matter how large the piece of paper. So technically, this statement is very wrong! Sorry to whoever answered this before me.
If you take a single sheet and fold it in half 8 times, the pack will have 64 layers.
If you could fold a newspaper in half 100 times, it would theoretically result in a thickness of approximately 13.6 billion light-years, far exceeding the observable universe's size. However, in reality, the paper would likely tear or become unmanageable after a certain number of folds due to physical constraints.
Such a fold is called a syncline.
Fold
A square paper can not be folded more than seven times.
my but
A fold
fold mountains form
Such a fold is called a syncline.