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the volume of air inside the balloon increases while the pressure of balloon decreases thus balloon inflates
Because the air pressure can't go anywhere so it trys to go out by pushing the balloon while it gets bigger it will pop and the air will go out.
How to get the air into the balloon and how to make it fly.
The answer is fairly simple, while some believe that a balloon bursts when near hot air because the balloon simple melts, it actually has to do with the pressure inside the balloon. When near hot air, the air inside the balloon expands slightly, causing a change in pressure, and causing the balloon to burst.
While a hot air balloon can fly several miles in the air, a tour balloon will generally only go about a mile up due to pressure concerns.
Carbon dioxide, the air we have in us that we breath out. Carbon dioxide doesn't make the balloon float in the air, while Helium does.
No, hot air balloons are kept up in the air by buoyancy, the same thing that keeps helium balloons up in the air, or that keeps ships afloat. The hot air in the balloon is less dense than the surrounding air, so the balloon weighs less than the air it displaces, at least while the balloon is rising.
It is safe at several condition such as clear climate i.e. no rain,stroms,etc.
The pilot of a hot air balloon uses the burners to move in different directions. Some of the air is moving east, while some of the air is moving west. The pilot of the balloon will either deflate or inflate the balloon to catch the wind in a particular direction.
If there is warm air in the balloon, cooler air makes the balloon rise and if there is cold air in the balloon warmer air makes the balloon fall.
A hot air balloon is powerless, relying on the winds for locomotion, while an airship has a motor, allowing it to drift with its own power.
A hot air balloon is powerless, relying on the winds for locomotion, while an airship has a motor, allowing it to drift with its own power.