No, Hydrogen is a gas. The verb "fly" can not be applied to a gas.
beecause hydrogen is less dense and light then air , easy to fly..the hydrogen in the balloon is lighter than the air outside of it.density of hydrogen is lower than air
Yes: Try hydrogen - it worked for the Hindenburg
Inside a balloon there is gas. This gas is normally helium if you want the balloon to fly high, but hydrogen also works.
The chemical energy from the Hydrogen fuel is converted to kinetic energy while in movement. Some of it is converted to Gravitational Potential Energy as it gains altitude.
Hydrogen-1, (there is a trace of hydrogen-2 (deuterium) found in nature, and hydrogen-3 is an artificial isotope)
Pitatre De Roze was the first man to fly in the Hydrogen balloon.
hydrogen
Two of the gases that are used to fly balloons are Hydrogen and Helium. Helium is the preferred gas because Hydrogen is very explosive. The Hindenburg disaster was caused by the ignition of the Hydrogen gas that filled it.
because it helps it fly in air
beecause hydrogen is less dense and light then air , easy to fly..the hydrogen in the balloon is lighter than the air outside of it.density of hydrogen is lower than air
hydrogen gas which is lighter than oxygen
Hydrogen is used in weather balloons because they are very light which help the balloon to float or fly easily.
Yes, that's what they filled the Hindenburg with but we all know how that turned out.
They are filled with helium gas. They used to be filled with hydrogen gas but that proved to be deadly at times.
Yes: Try hydrogen - it worked for the Hindenburg
The 'main sequence' which is also a fusion of hydrogen atoms in the atmosphere.
Helium, because it is lighter than air.