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paper folding
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Did you know that it is physically impossible to fold it in half more than eight times? The reason is exponential growth.
Starting with a piece of paper and folding it in half, you�ll notice that its thickness doubles to become two sheets thick. If you fold it again it becomes four sheets thick. This is double what you had before. In fact, each fold doubles the thickness of the stack of paper.
This relationship can be expressed mathematically as 2 x 2 x 2 x . . ., and so on, or 2n where n is equal to the number of folds.
When the paper is folded once, n equals one, therefore the thickness of the pile is 21 or two. When you fold it again, the thickness is 22 or 2 x 2 = 4. After the seventh fold, the thickness of the stack is 27 = 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 = 128.
What prevents the paper from folding any further is its inability to wrap around the thickness of the stack.
If you measure a stack of 10 sheets of paper, you�ll find that they have a thickness of approximately one millimetre. Therefore, each sheet averages 0.1 millimetres thick.
If this sheet were folded in half seven times, then its thickness would be 12.8 mm.
What if it was possible to continue folding the paper? Amazingly, the stack of paper would be over 1.6 metres thick (as tall as you are), after the 14th fold!
In fact, by the 28th fold it would be higher than Mount Everest and only five more folds would see it tower past the Moon (over 400 000 kilometres).
Many organisms, such as bacteria, multiply according to this simple mathematical principle. It�s amazing how a simple thing like doubling can cause such a rapid increase.