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Mathematics 19 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Important math question, will medal!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

If I wrote π on a paper and ate it, what flavor would it be?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

|dw:1419128586924:dw|

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

I don't know how you aren't getting question marks? did you use a 2 2 7 alt code to put up the pie?

OpenStudy (camerondoherty):

Depends on what you use to write it with If you write with a pen, it's going to taste lyke ink xc

OpenStudy (anonymous):

π

OpenStudy (camerondoherty):

Or maybe it will taste just like paper, who knows?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Should I try it?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Is ink okay to eat?

OpenStudy (camerondoherty):

No, it may be unhealthy

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

it would have a flavor of a very soft tree.

OpenStudy (camerondoherty):

Bahaha

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

want to know how paper is made?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I already know, it's compressed paper towels

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

lol, no

OpenStudy (misty1212):

if you put your question on paper and eat it, the answer will come out tomorrow

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Nasty xD

OpenStudy (solomonzelman):

it is made of tree, basically. and then out of this paper (well, out of cardboard really, but it is also made of trees) they make houses in the south of the US (if not near the ocean).

OpenStudy (anonymous):

First, papermakers spray the stock onto a long, wide screen, called a wire. Immediately, water begins to drain out the bottom of the wire. This water is collected so that it can be reused over and over again. Meanwhile, the pulp fibers are caught on the top side of the wire, and begin to bond together in a very thin mat. The fiber mat remaining on the wire is then squeezed between felt-covered press rollers to absorb more of the water. Even when this wet end work is over, the pulpy stuff on the wire is still about 60% water. But now it's time for the dry end. In the dry end, huge metal cylinders are heated by filling them with steam. The wet paper, which can be up to 30 feet wide, passes through these hot rollers - sometimes dozens of them, and often in three to five groups. Heating and drying the wet sheet seals the fibers closer and closer together, turning them gradually from pulp into paper. When you look at a piece of paper, can you find any difference in thickness in that single sheet? Probably not, thanks to a part of the paper machine called the calender - big, heavy cast iron rollers that press the drying paper smooth and uniform in thickness. Sometimes the paper is coated, often with fine clay, to make it glossier and easier to print on.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

That is how paper is made

OpenStudy (anonymous):

No, it's made from office depot

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Trust, I know these things.

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