Yes it will
It depends on the paper. If it is large and flat, then it will almost certainly land after the penny. If it is folded up nice and small and dense, then it will hit the ground at about the same time as the penny.
When you fold a paper airplane, you are changing its shape and creating aerodynamic forces that allow it to glide through the air more efficiently. The folds give the paper structure and stability, allowing it to maintain its momentum and fly further than a flat sheet of paper that would simply flutter to the ground due to lack of aerodynamics.
Because a flat piece of paper has a larger surface area and therefore more wind resistance. But in a crumbled piece of paper the wind resistance is less.
It's when you fold the paper in half down the center and when you stand the folded paper on a flat surface, it sticks up like a mountain!
The peice of paper compares to the paper airplane because they both have the same mass. Whether a paper is flat,folded in half or is shaped into a fancy paper boat it will always have the same amount of mass.
If you had a 3D shape made out of paper, that was all folded and taped together, and you pulled the tape off and layed the figure out flat, then you would get the net of the three dimensional solid.
To prevent watercolor paper from curling, you can stretch the paper before painting on it. This involves wetting the paper and then securing it to a flat surface until it dries completely. This process helps the paper stay flat and prevents it from curling when it absorbs water from the paint.
If you drop a piece of paper on the floor, it will fall to the ground due to gravity. The paper may fold, crumple, or remain flat, depending on how it lands and the surface it falls on.
Basically you take a sheet of paper and you fold it about 1cm or half an inch, horizontally (the longer length) up onto its self. then you take that part (still folded) and fold it underneath its self the same amount. and you keep doing this process until it's all folded. then you should have a piece of paper that when laid flat, it goes up and down in little 'triangles'. Now you have made your paper fan. Enjoy it in a relaxing place!have fun!
This is because the flat piece of paper has a greater surface area, thus creating more friction between the air and itself, (this is also known as air resistance). The crumpled ball however, has a smaller surface area, creating less air resistance. The shape is different, meaning that the amount of force it gets is also different.
SQUARE
net