The HIndenberg was filled with highly flamable Hydrogen.
Hydrogen is lighter than air so it rises.
No, the Hindenburg airship was filled with hydrogen gas, not helium. The use of hydrogen was a factor in the Hindenburg disaster, as the highly flammable gas led to the airship catching fire and crashing in 1937.
It was hydrogen. That's why it caught fire. Modern airships use helium.
The Hindenburg airship was filled with hydrogen gas, specifically about 7 million cubic feet of hydrogen. This highly flammable gas was used as a lifting agent to help the airship float.
The HIndenberg was filled with highly flamable Hydrogen.Hydrogen is lighter than air so it rises.
No, the Hindenburg was filled with hydrogen, not helium. Hydrogen is highly flammable and was a contributing factor to the 1937 Hindenburg airship disaster.
In 1937, the Hindenburg, a German passenger airship, was tragically destroyed in a fire while attempting to dock in Lakehurst, New Jersey. The disaster occurred on May 6, when the highly flammable hydrogen gas used to fill the airship ignited, leading to a catastrophic explosion that killed 36 people. This event marked the end of the airship era and raised significant concerns about the safety of hydrogen as a lifting gas. The Hindenburg disaster was widely covered in the media, significantly impacting public perception of air travel.
The Hindenburg was filled with highly flammable hydrogen gas which ignited as the airship was landing at Lakehurst NJ in 1936. 35 of the 97 passengers and crew, as well as one ground crew worker, were killed in the inferno.
The Hindenburg was a giant balloon airship filled with hydrogen gas for buoyancy.Hydrogen is the lightest of all gasses and has a mass of only half the mass of helium gas, so it worked well to lift the mass of the airship. The Hindenburg disaster took place on Thursday, May 6, 1937, and part of the disaster was due to the hydrogen gas catching fire. Helium would not catch fire since it is an inert gas.
the Hindenburg is an airship that exploded inMay 6, 1937
No he was dead when it was made.
Hydrogen.
An airship, made up of a huge gas-filled balloon, and powered by propellers.