No, air pressure increases as the balloon goes up, so the balloon will pop and fall to the ground.
You can get high up in the atmosphere (but you need a LOT of helium and a balloon that can get VERY big) you will not reach "outer" space beyond the Earth's atmosphere.
NO! all gas's volume depends on temperature, as the balloon goes up, its volume decreases, resulting in it no longer floating after a certain hight, after that, it will come down and expand again, repeating this process until it losses enough air to land, or another factor interferes with it.
Density water having a density of 1.00 anything .99 or below will float and anything above will sink same scenario for oxygen and gasses for example helium has a lighter density than oxygen and that's why helium filled balloons float
Yes. Helium is lighter than air.
This item float on the surface of water.
This depends on the density of this item: more denser than water-sink, less denser than water-float.
Even an unusual item such as this can be found on Amazon. Nextag also supplies this item. In the Swim is a national franchise that has pool supplies.
It could basically be the space that surrounds the organelles; but I suggest that the cytoplasm should be indentified by a color.
* wat is the answer is it soad???
float data
It depends on the density on the item. The density of water is 1.0 so if the density of the item is lower then that it will float, if the density is greater then that, then the item will sink.
Six pound can of crisco
You use the power slash and the item will float up to you.