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.
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.
The mass of a paper airplane is equal to the sheet of paper it is constructed out of, plus any additional materials.
Paper, because it is much lighter, and a foil airplane will take up much more mass.
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Mass of a substance is usually measured in standard unit called kilogram (kg) . Hence unit of mass of a piece of pad paper will be in kg.
The total mechanical energy of the paper airplane can be calculated as the sum of its kinetic energy (KE) and potential energy (PE). KE = 0.5 * mass * velocity^2 and PE = mass * gravity * height. Since the paper airplane is moving, it has kinetic energy. The total mechanical energy is KE + PE.
The mass of the dust formed on burning a piece of paper is likely to be less than the original mass of the paper. This is because burning paper results in a conversion of some of the paper's mass into gases and ash, which can float away. The remaining dust would likely be a small fraction of the original mass.
Yes, weight may affect a paper airplane by increasing its mass. This may alter its glide ratio and change its wing loading.
Mrs. Clark can determine the total number of pieces of paper by dividing the total mass of paper by the mass of one piece of paper. In this case, if a single piece of paper weighed 20 g and she cut it into quarters, each quarter would weigh 5 g. Therefore, she knows that there are four pieces of paper in total.
Drag effects paper airplane just as it affects anything else that moves. It is either parasitic or induced on paper airplanes. Drag may reduce a paper airplanes speed and/or range.
The force of gravity pulls the screwed up piece of paper downward. This force is a result of the mass of the paper interacting with the Earth's gravitational field.
A paper scale or grammage scale is used to measure the grammage (weight) of a piece of paper. It typically measures the mass of paper in grams per square meter (g/m²) by weighing a standardized area of the paper.