Yes it's a physical change. No new substance is formed,
Folding a paper does not form new substances.
A physical change is a change that affects the form of a substance without altering its chemical composition. Examples include bending a metal sheet, folding a piece of paper, or tearing a piece of fabric.
It is a physical change as the paper is still paper after you fold it.
Physical.
No. It is a physical change because there is no change in the chemical composition of the paper. If you were to burn the paper, that would be a chemical change called combustion, which would turn the paper into carbon dioxide and water, with the release of heat.
no it is not a physical change because folding a piece of paper does not chemicaly change it.
The current record for folding a piece of paper in half is 12 times, which results in 2^12 = 4096 layers. This record is constrained by the physical limitations of paper thickness and the properties of folding.
Folding a paper does not form new substances.
A physical change is a change that affects the form of a substance without altering its chemical composition. Examples include bending a metal sheet, folding a piece of paper, or tearing a piece of fabric.
It is a physical change as the paper is still paper after you fold it.
It is a physical change as the paper is still paper after you fold it.
Physical.
You have to keep folding a piece of paper until it is in the shape of a taco.
Folding the piece of paper does not change the thickness of the piece of paper. However, the thickness of the folded paper would be twice that of the original sheet of paper.
It is a physical change as the paper is still paper after you fold it.
origami? this is the Japanese art of paper folding. you do it by folding a square shaped piece of paper into shapes. you can search for instructions on Google. there are lots of good sites.
Mass, temperature, color and also density by measuring volume.