rub it on your hair.
Rubbing a balloon on your hair creates static electricity, which transfers electrons from your hair to the balloon. This causes the balloon to become negatively charged, resulting in it sticking to objects due to the attraction of opposite charges between the balloon and the object's surface.
Confetti sticks to a balloon due to static electricity. When the balloon rubs against the confetti, the friction causes charges to build up on the balloon's surface, attracting the confetti pieces. This static electricity helps the confetti stick to the balloon.
You can move a drinks can with a balloon by creating static electricity on the balloon and then using that static charge to attract the can. Rub the balloon against your hair or a piece of fabric to generate static electricity, then hold the balloon near the can to make it move. The can will be attracted to the charged balloon due to static electricity.
Rubbing a balloon creates static electricity. This is when the friction between the balloon and another object causes electrons to be transferred, leading to a buildup of static charge on the balloon.
The balloon will have static electricity after being rubbed on the woolen cloth. This results from the transfer of electrons between the balloon and the cloth, causing the balloon to become negatively charged.
Yes, the size of a balloon can affect the amount of static electricity it can give off. A larger balloon can hold a greater charge and potentially generate more static electricity compared to a smaller balloon. However, other factors such as the material of the balloon and environmental conditions can also impact the amount of static electricity generated.
Hair color itself does not affect balloon static electricity. The static electricity created when rubbing a balloon on hair is due to the friction between the two materials, not the color of the hair.
Static electricity.
Rubbing a balloon on woolen cloth will generate static electricity on the surface of the balloon. The balloon will then have a negative charge, attracting positively charged objects nearby, due to static electricity buildup.
This static electricity makes my hair stand on end!
Rubbing the balloon will create static electricity on its surface, causing it to stick to the wall due to the attraction of opposite charges. The balloon will remain in place on the wall until the static charge dissipates.
Static electricity is a build-up of electric charge on the surface of an object. When you rub a balloon against your hair, electrons transfer from your hair to the balloon, creating a charge imbalance. This causes the balloon to stick to objects or your hair because of the attractive forces between the charged balloon and uncharged objects.