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The friction from rubbing the balloon against your hair charges the balloon up with static electricity.
Your hair gives off electrons to the balloon and when you put the balloon close to your hair, it will go up and you can hear the static electricity.
ughm i think because when u pass a balloon on your head it make your hair move with it also.
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.
Electrons move between the hair and the balloon.
It will shock your hair
it deals with positive and negative charges when you rub it in your hair the negative charges get attracted to your hair. hope this helps!
The friction from rubbing the balloon against your hair charges the balloon up with static electricity.
Your hair gives off electrons to the balloon and when you put the balloon close to your hair, it will go up and you can hear the static electricity.
ughm i think because when u pass a balloon on your head it make your hair move with it also.
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.
This has to do with the charge of the objects. Positively charged items stick to negatively charged items (think "opposites attract"). Though objects like hair and balloons are generally neutral (without a charge) and do not attract anything, this can be changed through the transfer of electrons. Electrons are negatively charged subatomic particles that can be transferred between items through contact. When you rub a balloon on your hair, the contact between your hair and the balloon allows electrons to be transferred, known as the triboelectric effect. Some materials are more likely to gain electrons and become more negative, while others are more likely to lose electrons and become more positive. In the case of hair and a balloon, the electrons are transferred from your hair to the balloon, so the balloon becomes negative. Now that electrons have been transferred, your hair and the balloon are of opposite charged and attract one another; therefore, your hair sticks to the balloon. Before the balloon contacts the hair, they both have a stable balance of electrons and protons. Once the balloon is rubbed on the hair, it takes electrons from the hair. Thus leaving the hair positively charged and the balloon negatively charged. Once the balloon is pulled away the hair sticks to it. This happens because opposite charges attract and since the hair was positively charged, and the balloon is negatively charged, they attract.
Electrons move between the hair and the balloon.
because she her hair was the negative charged into the balloon which it caused it to stick to the balloon....does that answer your question...
Friction pulls electrons from the hair to the balloon. This makes the hair positive, and the balloon negative.
ughm i think because when u pass a balloon on your head it make your hair move with it also.
Because of the static electricity.