22.4 liter of Helium will weight 4.0026 g
Better check on that again, helium is lighter than air and the specific gravity of air is approximately 1.3 milligrams per cubic centimeter. Water weighs much more than air, 1 gram per cubic centimeter.
2 liters or 16 ounce 12 ounce depends it can be anything because it depends on the capacity of the soft What_volume_of_helium_would_be_in_a_balloon_the_size_of_a_soft_drink_bottlebottle
Helium-filled objects "float" in most substances that aren't primarily hydrogen or helium because of it's less dense. Helium has a weight of 0.1785 grams per liter. Nitrogen, on the other hand, which makes up 80% of the air we breathe, weighs 1.2506 grams per liter. Things that are lighter over the same surface area are more buoyant.However, helium isn't the lightest element. Hydrogen, weighing a mere 0.08988 grams per liter, is. The reason hydrogen isn't used as commonly as helium to fill things is because of the high flammability of hydrogen, with a small spark causing a hypothetical hydrogen balloon to explode.
10^-3
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Better check on that again, helium is lighter than air and the specific gravity of air is approximately 1.3 milligrams per cubic centimeter. Water weighs much more than air, 1 gram per cubic centimeter.
No, nitrous oxide has a density of around 1.977 grams/liter, "air" at sea level has a density of 1.2 grams/liter, meaning that nitrous oxide is more dense than air. Helium on the other hand has a density of 0.1785 grams/liter, making it less dense than air... Also making helium a popular choice for filling balloons. Hydrogen is another common balloon filling gas. Although it is highly flammable. (Hindenburg)
The ballon will pop conserning the ballons' preshure. If it is low the ballon will not pop, but if it has high preshure it will pop.
2 liters or 16 ounce 12 ounce depends it can be anything because it depends on the capacity of the soft What_volume_of_helium_would_be_in_a_balloon_the_size_of_a_soft_drink_bottlebottle
Helium-filled objects "float" in most substances that aren't primarily hydrogen or helium because of it's less dense. Helium has a weight of 0.1785 grams per liter. Nitrogen, on the other hand, which makes up 80% of the air we breathe, weighs 1.2506 grams per liter. Things that are lighter over the same surface area are more buoyant.However, helium isn't the lightest element. Hydrogen, weighing a mere 0.08988 grams per liter, is. The reason hydrogen isn't used as commonly as helium to fill things is because of the high flammability of hydrogen, with a small spark causing a hypothetical hydrogen balloon to explode.
10^-3
My dear friend. The answer to your question is yes. Neon is one of the so called lighter than air gases. It's lift capacity is sort of the same capacity as hot air gives. The only problem about it is the high cost of neon gas, plus like any other gas it will leak out after a while through the pores of the balloon's walls. Seems like it's not worth it to use neon gas in a balloon, although it will float nonetheless. Regards Marcio Nehrebecki
Helium rises because it is less dense than the air. If it is less dense then it will rise above the air until it meets a gas lighter than it. There are other gases lighter than air. You should experiment with other gases inside balloons.Less dense, or 'lighter than Air'.A one liter balloon filled with Helium and placed on a weigh scale will weigh less than the same balloon filled with air.Less *apex
i assume you mean deci. There are 10 decilitres in a litre
Around 0.12 percent, it differs in different countries depending on the environment and altitude.
It won't - at some time the balloon would burst or become the same density as the atmosphere, so stop rising. The above answer is correct. At about 110,000 feet or ~ 21+ miles (when the shuttle was well into the stratosphere) the balloon will burst. However to get the space shuttle into the stratosphere it would take 2,029,203,000 liters of helium and would cost approximately $ 146,102,616. Assumptions: Space shuttle weighs: 2,029,203 KG 1 Liter of helium can lift ~ 1 gram. Helium costs approximately 7.2 cents per gram. According to the NASA website it costs $450,000,000 to launch a shuttle. Maybe they should look into using helium to get them the first 20 miles.
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