electricity well then flow
Closing the mouth of an inflated balloon helps to keep the air trapped inside. If the mouth is left open, the air can escape and deflate the balloon. Closing the mouth also helps to create pressure inside the balloon, keeping it inflated.
The air would escape through the mouth causing the balloon to DEflate
When a charged balloon is brought close to a wall, the charges on the balloon induce an opposite charge on the wall due to electrostatic induction. This causes the wall to be attracted to the balloon. If the charges on the balloon are strong enough, the wall may even stick to the balloon momentarily.
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.
To prove that air takes up space without adding a manipulated variable, you can use a simple experiment where you place an inflated balloon inside a closed container. Close the container and observe that the balloon will prevent the container from being fully closed, demonstrating that the air inside the balloon (which is a part of the air in the container) is taking up space.
When the rubbed balloon is brought close to the can, electrons will transfer from the can to the balloon, creating a net positive charge on the can. This causes the can to be attracted to the negatively charged balloon, leading to the can moving towards the balloon until they touch or reach a balance in the electrostatic forces.
There is a handle that you pull to close the vent that blows hot air into the balloon.
no, the air inside balloons is a gas and therefore the particles are moving quickly and are spread out, bouncing off the sides of the balloon. Particles in solids are packed close together.
When the balloon was to close to the light it will rupture from the string
Well, honey, to find the volume of an inflated balloon, you measure the diameter with a ruler or tape measure. Then you use the formula for the volume of a sphere, V = 4/3 * π * r^3, where r is the radius (half of the diameter). Plug in the radius and calculate that volume, and you've got yourself the volume of that inflated balloon. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
What happens during a monthly close and an annual close?
The outer casing splits open, and if there's a tube inside it'll go too. There is a loud bang, and if you're close enough you might get hit by strips and shards thrown away by the rupture.