"No as the vinegar and baking soda combined weight is too heavy - helium lighter than air therefore it goes up/floats" Hello - the above prior answer is correct if you mean attaching vinegar and baking soda as a payload. If you mean just capturing the gas from the reaction, the above answer ends up correct anyway, as the gaseous product of the reaction is CO2 (carbon dioxide). CO2 is about 50% heavier than air (mostly Nitrogen), so a balloon filled with CO2 will still sink. ---MexicoDoug
Baking soda will not work with most dyes. It has the opposite effect, it makes the dye less reactive. For all you wanted to know about dye, see the website I have provided.In the article you will see the words sodium bicarbonate used instead of baking soda. It is the chemical name for baking soda. Also note, baking soda (bicarbonate of soda is another name for it) is NOT the same as baking powder.
White vinegar has been proven to work time and again to remove hard water stains from toilets. See the step by step method below:Natural Formula to Use:Pure white vinegarMethod to Use:1.Fill a clean spray bottle with pure vinegar2.Spray the vinegar freely over the toilet and wait for a few minutes3.If stains are stubborn spray more vinegar and wait a while longer4.Simply wipe away with a clean cloth to reveal the shineTips:For toilet bowls add 1 liter of vinegar to the bowl itself and scrub with a toilet brush to dissolve away hard water stains that has built up over time. Also, by adding 1 liter of pure vinegar to the cistern (tank at back of toilet) this not only removes any stains from there but also removes any from underneath the rim on the next flush!Sometimes stains are extra stubborn - for this make a paste of white vinegar and baking soda and scrub gently with a soft brush or sponge. Never use an abrasive cleaner like scouring pads, powders or steel wool as this will scratch the surface.
Abdominal aneurysmorrhaphy is the medical term meaning suture of an abdominal aneurysm. A localized balloonlike enlargement of an artery is an aneurysm.
Looks like a retail value of about $150 to $200 for the early ones, likely much less at auction as they are a common find. Both were made for many years. A less than perfect one of recent vintage would be of minimal value.
Here's what you do:Fill the jar with the vinegar (enough to cover the egg) and place the hard-boiled egg inside of the jar. Put the lid on the jar and loosely tighten it. Leave the jar in a place where it will not be disturbed; especially away from the little brother's hands. You'll notice that many small bubbles will form on the eggshell as soon as you place the egg in the vinegar. If you watch the egg for a while, you'll see that some of the bubbles will grow larger and rise to the surface of the vinegar. Sometimes, large bubbles will form on the bottom of the egg. The egg will move around because the egg and the vinegar are denser, or heavier, than the bubbles. The egg will float as soon as enough bubbles are attached to it. The bubbles will cause it to move so that it looks like it's alive!The vinegar will completely decompose the shell of the egg in about one or two days. When the shell is gone, take the egg out of the jar and wash it and allow it to dry. It will feel leathery. After it's dry,try to bounce it. It will bounce like a ball!
Yes! if you have too much of one then it cannot completely react but will fill the balloon up 100% comparatively. if you have the right amount then it will not waste a lot and will fill up the balloon 90% comparatively. if you don't add enough of one then you will fill it up a lot less like 50% comparatively. (but one of the ingredients has to be constant)
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.
Chemicals such as baking soda and vinegar can react to produce carbon dioxide gas, which can inflate a balloon by increasing pressure inside it. When the reaction occurs in a closed environment like a balloon, the increasing pressure forces the balloon to inflate.
Both
About the same. You can't really tell the difference between gasses just by looking at the balloon (unless it's floating). It will be filled with CO2, a colorless gas, just like air. It will be heavier, but not noticeably so.
When helium is used to fill a balloon, it expands to fill the space inside the balloon due to its low density. The helium gas takes the shape of the balloon because it moves and distributes evenly throughout the balloon's interior.
Yes, because it doesn't like black people. Vin-Niger.
The regular chemical reaction that you would see with something like a volcano experiment would still happen under a balloon. Air would be released, the balloon would expand and eventually pop.
It bubbles up, like baking soda and vinegar
lemon juice
helium balloons get filled with a amount of air in which is called helium it is used to make balloons float around in air. helium is a inert,gaseous element!!!!!yea i kenisha am smartHelium is less dense than air, therefore a helium-filled balloon will float in air.Helium is lighter that air, so it effectively floats on air. As a helium balloon is submerged in air, it rises upwards (like an air filled bubble in water).
To make a balloon hover like a fish in a tank of fresh water, you can fill the balloon with a gas that is less dense than air, such as helium. The buoyant force of the helium will cause the balloon to float in the water similarly to how a fish hovers in a tank.