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water....if you would survive in a balloon you would have no space to stay in there
Nothing. The bottle is now truly empty.
For the same reason that a beach ball can rise high in the water but can't leave the water. A balloon is floating in air. If there is no air around it, then it has nothing to float in.
To keep a Hot air balloon in the sky indefinitely you must keep all the air sealed and warm. The Hot air's lower density will keep it above the more dense, colder air. To demonstrate this put air inside a bottle and place it on-top of water. Notice how it stays "afloat". ======================================================== To keep a hot air balloon aloft indefinitely, the temperature of the air inside the balloon must be hot enough so that the difference in weight of the air inside the balance and an equivaletnt volume outside of the balloon equals or exceeds the total weight of the balloon and passengers. It doesn have to be air tight. Hot air balloons are open on the bottom. But it has to be air tight enough that the burner will be capable of keeping the air hot enough to maintain altitude.
The 'operator' fills the bottle with water, then pumps air into it - creating pressure. When the stopper is released, the air pressure forces the water out of the narrow opening in the bottle's neck - creating a stream powerful enough to launch the rocket into the air.
Yes! If you heat a bottle with hot water, the balloon would grow bigger and bigger while if you put it under cold water, you would find out that the balloon became deflated again.
If you filled the bottle with water and then poked the balloon with a pin, I believe it would pierce but not pop it. With the balloon pierced, all you would then have to do is drain the water from the bottle, maneuver the balloon toward its mouth and drain it, and then finish removing the balloon either by fishing or dropping it out of the bottle's mouth.
when you but the bottle in hot water the balloon particles push apart and cause expansion
The hot water heats up the air inside the bottle, causing it to expand, forcing some of the air out of the bottle and into the balloon, causing it to inflate. The larger the bottle, the more air that will be pushed into the balloon. The air in the balloon will quickly cool and, since hot air is less dense and therefore rises, the cooler air is forced back into the bottle to be heated up. Eventually the air will be a constant temperature and the balloon will reach the limit of inflation. As the water cools, the air cools and the balloon begins to deflate.
Air inside the bottle expands when the bottle is heated. Some of it leaves the bottle until the pressure of the heated air remaining in the bottle equals the pressure of the air in the room. The balloon is then placed over the neck of the bottle and prevents any more air from entering or leaving the bottle. The air inside the bottle cools to the temperature of the ice water. The cooler air inside the bottle takes less space (volume) than it did when hot, so it sucks the balloon inside the neck of the bottle. Air pressure inside the bottle causes the balloon to stretch and enlarge until the air pressure inside the bottle, including the air in the balloon, has the same pressure as the air in the room.
The hot water heats the air in the system, causing it to expand.
Yeast of course, beer bottle, water, balloon and sugar maple syrup.
the balloon will start to blow up by the heat
Because the water is like skin to the outer of the balloon so there is no way of popping it from fire.
jug of hot water, balloon, bottle
it would go in
This is described by Boyle's law which states that PV = nRT or in English, the product of pressure and volume is proportional to the temperature. Putting the bottle in hot water expands the gas in the bottle which inflates the balloon.