Yes a piece of paper is an object same as a pen or an apple or a dog are objects.
Nothing will happen to the colour of the shadow. A shadow is the absence of light, and the object will still block the blue light.
forces always have to touch an object to affect it because if you lay down a small piece of paper and blow on it its going to move p.s. I'm only a 5th grader
you are folding it, there is still only one piece of paper
No, the force of gravity is the same for both the crumpled and non-crumpled pieces of paper. Gravity acts on all objects the same way, regardless of their shape or condition. The only factor that affects the force of gravity is the mass of the object.
A flat piece of paper has a larger surface area, creating friction with the air, or more air resistance. There is more air surrounding the piece of paper, and this slows it down. A crumpled piece of paper has less surface area to create friction, meaning less air resistance. This causes it to fall faster.
-- A paper weight on a piece of paper. -- A car on an ant
Paper is a 3D object.
Lino printing is when you paint a side of an object and put it on a piece of paper or card, and it the shape of whatever part of the object you painted will transfer onto the paper.
a piece of paper is a 3D object it has a front and back face + two side edges + a top and bottom edge = 6 sides a piece of paper has 6 sides
A flat piece of paper is 2D. A cube is 3D. Therefore the drawing of the cube is a representation.
None. It's an inert object.
A physical change only changes the appearance of an object, it's chemical makeup is still the same. Melting ice doesn't change it to a different object, just a different state. Like if you rip a piece of paper, it's still a piece of paper. But a chemical change changes the makeup of the object. Burning is a chemical change. Once it burns it is no longer paper.
8 inches x 8 inches = 64 square inches = the area of the piece of paper. Length and width are used to find the area of an object, not the volume (cubic inches). To find the volume of the piece of paper you need to know the depth of the sheet of paper. You might be able to find this out with a Google search.
Wrap the strip of paper around the plate or can and mark it where it completes a full circle around the object. Then lay the strip on a flat surface and measure the marked length using the ruler. That length is the perimeter (circumference) of the round object.
The plural of a piece of paper is "pieces of paper."
you have to look at the piece of paper and the things that are on the piece of paper follow it
Put an interesting object on a piece of sun print paper in the sun for 5 minutes. Then soak the paper in water and watch a permanent print appear!