well not hot but warm as the sunlight is on 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!
because black takes in heat
Black coloured paper will absorb the sun's heat quicker than lighter colours.
I don't know.... That's a good question. Maybe you should try it when it's hot and sunny outside. : )
When the sun gets way to hot that it collappses into a black hole
No. The apparent dark areas on the sun are not black holes; they are sunspots. Sunspots are areas of the sun's surface that are not as hot as their surroundings.
Black is quite a hot colour when exposed to the sun
The black paper absorbs heat and raises the temperature, causing the leaf to dry out and wilt due to excessive loss of moisture through transpiration. With prolonged exposure, the leaf may eventually die as it is deprived of sunlight for photosynthesis and becomes overheated.
No, a piece of paper is not a luminous object. Luminous objects emit their own light, like the sun or a light bulb. Paper reflects light and may appear visible when illuminated, but it does not produce light on its own.
Black clothing absorb heat that's why we feel hot in black clothing. Specially in sun light we feel black clothing is hot.
They're both hot And illuminate heat that can burn u
If you fold a piece of paper in half 50 times, you would get a stack of paper so thick that it would reach the sun and back multiple times, with a thickness much larger than the observable universe. It's a theoretical concept as it exceeds physical limits.