Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Have a go at this without a calculator....
26 Answers
Imagine that you can fold a piece of paper as many times as you want to (we all know it's about 8 times in reality).
This piece of paper is one thousandth of an inch thick (0.001")
You are to fold this piece of paper exactly in half for 50 times.
What is the total thickness from top to bottom of this piece of folded paper?
This piece of paper is one thousandth of an inch thick (0.001")
You are to fold this piece of paper exactly in half for 50 times.
What is the total thickness from top to bottom of this piece of folded paper?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by magicmerlin. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This would be correct if the fold was perfect but I thought that when paper is folded the fold took the form of a semi circle at the ends and the layers do not sit perfectly on top of each other.
Certainly mathematicians refer to the 'loss function' (http://www.its.caltech.edu/~ari/paper-folding. html)
which impacts on the minimum size of the original sheet needed to achieve a given number of folds. So my question for you, magicmerlin, is how big would the original sheet have to be in order to achieve 50 folds?
Certainly mathematicians refer to the 'loss function' (http://www.its.caltech.edu/~ari/paper-folding. html)
which impacts on the minimum size of the original sheet needed to achieve a given number of folds. So my question for you, magicmerlin, is how big would the original sheet have to be in order to achieve 50 folds?
factor30. It would appear that you have spotted my omission. I should have stated that the piece of paper can be as big as it needs to be. Although it did not stop others having a go. You are now going to ask who can fold a piece of paper that is nearly 9 million miles thick to get to the final thickness, my answer to that is 'don't'. The purpose of the exercise was mental arithmetic.
This was on the Real Hustle on BBC Three recently. The answer for 60 folds is at the end of the clip.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xm8d8xmqTk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xm8d8xmqTk