No. The amount required would be enough to rupture it and probably do a lot more damage.
because of the weight of the bottle, also the helium may be compressed
Yes. You might inflate like a balloon and float away in the breeze.
Black holes maximizes the gravitational pull to infinite so multiplying the gravitational pull on a helium balloon will make it float away faster because a helium balloon has a negative in which gravity pulls it down.
Since they are gases, neither nitrogen or helium are technically able to dissolve in the same way that a solid dissolves in a liquid. However, if they were to mix, it would not go well because the helium would float away very quickly.
No matter how little gravity, as long as it is still positive, you would not float. For that, you would have to have less density than the air. With zero gravity, both we and the air would float away into space.
Float Away was created on 2005-09-20.
Float Away Deconstructed was created in 2005.
you find helium gas as a by product from the sun .you also find it in a form of alpha particle . but the form we often use today is found in the atmosphere but it only 0.005 of our amothsphere is helium gas because a lot of the helium gas flouts away.
well it depends what type of balloon it is if it is filled with helium it will float higher and higher until it will pop under the air pressure. but if it a ballon filled with normal air it will just float back down or get blown away if there is wind
Island - Float Away - was created on 2007-06-19.
They don't float away because of gravity
No, soccer balls are filled with ordinary air If they were filled with helium, they would float into the skyHelium filled soccer balls would certainly not "fly into the sky"! The difference in mass of an air filled ball and one filled with helium would be but a few grams! But the helium (having a much smaller molecule than those that comprise air) would leak out of the bladder more quickly. In addition Helium is much more expensive than compressed air.