static electricity
The static produced by the friction will make the balloon stick to the wall.
It will stick on u if try to attach it to your hair or shirt
The balloon is electrified by transferring elect rons from/to your hair. This electrified balloon then attracts electrons on the wall and this attraction force causes the balloon to stick to the wall until the charges decay form leakage to the wall or air.
It has electro static cells that form when re-peatedly rubbed wich creates friction ending with a attraction to the item of your choice. When you rub the balloon you create a static charge that is positive and the attraction that makes it stick to the wall is because the wall has a negative charge and like poles attract.
because it is electricity
static electricity
The static produced by the friction will make the balloon stick to the wall.
It will stick on u if try to attach it to your hair or shirt
When you rub your head against a balloon and 1. Your hair sticks up and 2. The balloon can stick to the ceiling :)
The balloon is electrified by transferring elect rons from/to your hair. This electrified balloon then attracts electrons on the wall and this attraction force causes the balloon to stick to the wall until the charges decay form leakage to the wall or air.
It has electro static cells that form when re-peatedly rubbed wich creates friction ending with a attraction to the item of your choice. When you rub the balloon you create a static charge that is positive and the attraction that makes it stick to the wall is because the wall has a negative charge and like poles attract.
Answer: When you put the balloon on the wall after you rubbed it on the sweater. the balloon would either stick to the wall or repel from the wall depending on what kind of electrons there are on the sweater
i had it and my sister did it you put the water on the rub-on sheet and you stick it on the paper you want to rub it on and rub it with the stick
electrons are transferred from your hair to the balloon . so ballon gets a negative charge . so there is a transfer of energy when you rub your hair with balloon and static electricity is producedP.S. : HAIR SHOULD BE DRY
Electrons move between the hair and the balloon.
Compared to what ? Here's something to think about: There are some bits of tissue lying on the table on a dry day. You rub a balloon against your sweater a few times, and then you pass the balloon low over the bits of tissue. In response to the electrostatic force of the charged balloon, the bits jump off the table and up to stick to the balloon ... even though the gravity of the whole Earth is pulling them down.