On modern airplanes no, because the cabin is pressurised to the same atmospheric pressure as on the ground. If the balloon was on the outside of the plane, and the atmospheric pressure at that altitude were low enough, then yes, the balloon would pop.
Air balloons, the ones used to lift humans, are usually hot-air balloons, so they don't have any helium to lose.
Smaller ones, can be filled with helium and will slowly lose it a little at a time.
When heat is exposed to the helium balloon it becomes to be even less dense and the molecules begin to expand and eventually the balloon will pop.
the ballon would explode when it is in space, because the is almost nothing in space. so the helium atoms would spread and the balloon would pop.
The helium weighs less than air- so when the balloon is filled, it displaces the heavier air, and floats. Just as a bit of wood weighs less than water, and floats on water. In a vacuum, a helium filled balloon would not float (but it may pop)
How much a helium balloon carries depends on the size of the balloon.
No. Helium is lighter than air
a helium balloon pops as it goes higher because the different combination of pressure. you could take a balloon in an airplane because the cabin is pressurized. as it gets higher the amount of pressure changes so it pops the balloon.
When heat is exposed to the helium balloon it becomes to be even less dense and the molecules begin to expand and eventually the balloon will pop.
temperature affects helium for example, if you put a balloon in a hot car it will pop
Depends on the type of rubber and amount of helium in balloon
Because helium is less denser than air a helium balloon can rise; it is very simple !
the ballon would explode when it is in space, because the is almost nothing in space. so the helium atoms would spread and the balloon would pop.
Fill two balloons. One with hydrogen gas and the other with helium gas. Allow them to float on a piece of string. Taking a lighted/burning taper/splinter. , and burst the two balloons with the burning splinter. The helium filled balloon will just 'pop' and fall to the ground. The hydrogen filled balloon will 'pop with a flash of flame' So helium ; NO Flame Hydrogen ; A FLASH of FLAME.
A helium "balloon" is composed of two parts: the SOLID rubber balloon skin, and the GASeous helium. So the balloon part itself is a solid.
It was made out of the light gas gas Helium.
depends how big the helium balloon is and how many
No, air pressure increases as the balloon goes up, so the balloon will pop and fall to the ground. You can get high up in the atmosphere (but you need a LOT of helium and a balloon that can get VERY big) you will not reach "outer" space beyond the Earth's atmosphere.
Helium. The helium gas in the balloon is lighter than the air outside the balloon.