I will probably be over-inflated and pop. But, a substance like diharroea will drop on the person who did the experiment's bottom and cause it to swell.
If you put an inflated balloon in a jar and then remove the air from the jar the balloon will expand. Perhaps to the point of bursting, or to the point where it coats the entire inner surface of the jar.
because the air inside the balloon take up the space and it will not allow the balloon to fit in bag
Yes, the mass of the balloon increases as you put in more air because air has mass. The more air you add to the balloon, the more mass it will have.
Air fill the balloon and force it to expand but being a rubber base substance the balloon always in the state of pushing the air (that's why if you put a hole on a balloon it will "fly"). Air pushing is an action. Balloon pushing back is a reaction.
Any gas that is more dense than air.Answer:It is a bit more complex than that - an air filled balloon would still fall because air has the density of air. In a normal inflated balloon the air in the balloon is compressed and has a density more than uncompressed air. If the "balloon" were a plastic bag wiith no air pressure above the pressure of the surrounding air, the balloon would still fall as the combined (average) density of the balloon/bag system is greater than the surrounding air. Even if the balloon were filled with a gas with a lower specific gravity than air the balloon wll fall if the compressed gas density excedes that of the surrounding air or if the combined (average) density of the balloon/bag or balloon system is greater than the surrounding air.
When you fill a balloon with steam and put it in the refrigerator, the steam will condense back into water droplets, causing the balloon to shrink as the gas inside loses volume. The cooling of the gas molecules in the balloon will also decrease their kinetic energy, leading to a decrease in pressure inside the balloon.
take the balloon,put the top inside of the sink and twist the lever of the sink.(dont pour in too much water)Next, tie the balloon and have the most s!#$ as$ lame water balloon fight ever u loner!
Water cannot fill the glass because the glass is already ~lled with air. The "empty" glass is full of air. So, air takes up space. Air is a gas. It has no size or shape of its own but will fill every space it can.
One way to put glitter in a balloon without letting the air out is to use a funnel. Insert the funnel into the neck of the balloon and carefully pour the glitter inside. This will prevent air from escaping while filling the balloon with glitter.
Yes. Mass is a property of matter. All matter has mass. Air is matter in the gaseous phase. Anything that takes up space has matter. An atom takes up space, and air is made of atoms. (Oxygen, Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen mainly..) . So since it takes up space, it has mass. You can visualize this by simply blowing up a balloon. The balloon is empty at first. As you inflate the balloon with air from your lungs, the flexible sides of the balloon must expand to accommodate the increased volume of air. The more air you put in, the harder the air presses against the sides of the balloon, and the firmer the balloon gets. Pretty soon the balloon has stretched as far as it can, and then >bang<! The pressure of air is too much, and it bursts. If your Basketball is "flat", it simply doesn't have enough air inside it to keep it firm. More air = more pressure. So you can see clearly that "air", even though it is invisible, does indeed have mass.
Yes, gas will uniformly fill any container it is put in to fill the available space. The gas molecules will spread out to evenly fill the space they are contained in.
it pops