Exponential Growth How Folding Paper Can Get You to the Moon

How many times can you
fold a piece of paper?

Assume that one had a piece
of paper that was very fine,

like the kind they typically
use to print the Bible.

In reality, it seems like a piece of silk.

To qualify these ideas,

let’s say you have a paper

that’s one-thousandth
of a centimeter in thickness.

That is 10 to the power
of minus three centimeters,

which equals .001 centimeters.

Let’s also assume that you have
a big piece of paper,

like a page out of the newspaper.

Now we begin to fold it in half.

How many times do you think
it could be folded like that?

And another question:

If you could fold the paper over and over,
as many times as you wish,

say 30 times,

what would you imagine
the thickness of the paper would be then?

Before you move on,

I encourage you to actually think
about a possible answer to this question.

OK.

After we have folded the paper once,

it is now two thousandths
of a centimeter in thickness.

If we fold it in half once again,

the paper will become
four thousandths of a centimeter.

With every fold we make,
the paper doubles in thickness.

And if we continue to fold
it again and again,

always in half, we would confront
the following situation

after 10 folds.

Two to the power of 10,

meaning that you multiply
two by itself 10 times,

is one thousand and
24 thousandths of a centimeter,

which is a little bit over one centimeter.

Assume we continue folding
the paper in half.

What will happen then?

If we fold it 17 times,

we’ll get a thickness
of two to the power of 17,

which is 131 centimeters,

and that equals just over four feet.

If we were able to fold it 25 times,

then we would get two to the power of 25,

which is 33,554 centimeters,

just over 1,100 feet.

That would make it almost
as tall as the Empire State Building.

It’s worthwhile to stop here
and reflect for a moment.

Folding a paper in half, even a paper
as fine as that of the Bible,

25 times would give us a paper
almost a quarter of a mile.

What do we learn?

This type of growth
is called exponential growth,

and as you see, just by folding a paper

we can go very far, but very fast too.

Summarizing, if we fold a paper 25 times,

the thickness is almost
a quarter of a mile.

30 times, the thickness reaches 6.5 miles,

which is about the average
height that planes fly.

40 times, the thickness
is nearly 7,000 miles,

or the average GPS satellite’s orbit.

48 times, the thickness
is way over one million miles.

Now, if you think that the distance
between the Earth and the Moon

is less than 250,000 miles,

then starting with a piece of Bible paper

and folding it 45 times,
we get to the Moon.

And if we double it one more time,

we get back to Earth.

一张纸你能折多少次

假设一个人有
一张非常好的纸,

就像他们通常
用来印刷圣经的那种。

实际上,它看起来就像一块丝绸。

为了验证这些想法,

假设您有一张

厚度为千分之一厘米的纸。

即 10
的负三厘米次方

,等于 0.001 厘米。

我们还假设您有
一张大纸,

例如报纸上的一页。

现在我们开始把它对折。

你觉得
它可以这样折叠多少次?

还有一个问题:

如果你可以把这张纸一次又一次地折叠起来,
如你所愿,

比如 30 次,

你会想象
那张纸的厚度是多少?

在你继续之前,

我鼓励你真正考虑
这个问题的可能答案。

行。

我们把纸折叠一次后,

它现在
的厚度是千分之二厘米。

如果我们再把它对折,

那张纸就会变成
千分之四厘米。

我们每折一次
,纸的厚度就会增加一倍。

如果我们继续
一次又一次地弃牌,

总是对半,我们将

在 10 次弃牌后面临以下情况。

2 的 10 次方,

这意味着你将
2 自身乘以 10 次

,是一厘米的千分之二十四,

比一厘米多一点。

假设我们继续
将纸对折。

那时会发生什么?

如果我们将它折叠 17 次,

我们将得到
2 的 17 次方的厚度,

即 131 厘米,

刚好超过 4 英尺。

如果我们能够将它折叠 25 次,

那么我们将得到 2 的 25 次方,

即 33,554 厘米,

刚好超过 1,100 英尺。

这将使它几乎
和帝国大厦一样高。

值得在这里停下来
思考片刻。

将一张纸对折,即使是一张
和圣经一样精细的纸,

25 次也能得到一张
将近四分之一英里的纸。

我们学到什么?

这种
增长称为指数增长

,正如你所见,只要折叠一张纸,

我们就可以走得很远,但也很快。

总而言之,如果我们将一张纸折叠 25 次

,厚度几乎
是四分之一英里。

30次,厚度达到6.5英里,

大约
是飞机飞行的平均高度。

40倍,
厚度近7000英里,

或平均GPS卫星的轨道。

48倍,
厚度超过一百万英里。

现在,如果你认为
地球和月球之间的

距离小于 250,000 英里,

那么从一张圣经纸开始

,折叠 45 次,
我们就到达了月球。

如果我们再增加一倍,

我们就会回到地球。