When you squeeze and crumple a piece of paper, the shape and arrangement of the paper fibers are altered. The paper becomes less smooth and more wrinkled due to the compression of the fibers. The paper's original form is distorted, compromising its flatness and smoothness.
When you crumple a piece of paper, a physical change occurs. The paper's shape and appearance change, but its chemical composition remains the same.
You can crumple the paper up to increase its air resistance, which will slow down its rate of fall. This will cause the paper to fall more slowly, closer to the rate at which the book is falling.
When you crumple a piece of paper, the fibers in the paper are disrupted and the paper loses its original shape. This makes it more difficult to unfold the paper neatly and it will often have permanent creases or wrinkles.
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.
No it doesn't change at all! Crumpling up the paper only changes the shape it but its weight stays the same.
When you crumple a piece of paper, a physical change occurs. The paper's shape and appearance change, but its chemical composition remains the same.
A phsical change is something that can be changed but cant be changed back. for example: you can crumple a piece of paper but it is still paper. A chemical change means it has been changed perminetly so for example: If you burn the paper its ashes not paper. it was ashes but youy cant change it back into paper. Hope this helps :)
You can crumple the paper up to increase its air resistance, which will slow down its rate of fall. This will cause the paper to fall more slowly, closer to the rate at which the book is falling.
When you crumple a piece of paper, the fibers in the paper are disrupted and the paper loses its original shape. This makes it more difficult to unfold the paper neatly and it will often have permanent creases or wrinkles.
it is a physical change
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.
No it doesn't change at all! Crumpling up the paper only changes the shape it but its weight stays the same.
You can crumple it, tear it, fold it, or shake it to make various sounds. These sounds can range from soft rustling to loud crinkling depending on how you manipulate the paper.
No, but they are similar. You would crush a can - you would damage it, and compress it. Whereas you would crumple a piece of paper - you would wrinkle it with compression. One is much more violent than the other.
Take a piece of paper and cut it in half (anywhere will do) and you will have two pieces of paper - and your original piece of paper has changed shape.
Crumple the paper into a tight ball before dropping it. The increased surface area and air resistance of a flat sheet of paper slowed its fall, and crumpling it reduces both, allowing it to fall quicker.
To make a piece of paper fall slowly, you can crumple it into a loose ball or create an air resistance barrier underneath it by placing a mesh or netting. This will increase the surface area and air resistance, slowing down its descent. You can also gently drop it from a height to further reduce its speed.