When a bottle of hot water is placed near a balloon stretched over the top, the air inside the balloon will expand due to the heat, causing the balloon to inflate. Conversely, if the hot water cools down, the air will contract and the balloon will deflate.
When rain contacts a hot air balloon envelope, the fabric of the envelope may absorb water and become heavier. This can affect the balloon's lift capacity and may require the pilot to make adjustments to maintain proper altitude and control. Additionally, rain can cool the air inside the balloon, causing it to descend unless the burner is used to heat the air.
Nothing. The bottle is now truly empty.
Bottle rockets require water to create steam pressure within the bottle. This pressure builds up when the water inside is heated by the ignited propellant, causing the bottle to launch upwards. The steam escaping through the nozzle propels the bottle rocket into the air.
The 'operator' fills the bottle with water, then pumps air into it - creating pressure. When the stopper is released, the air pressure forces the water out of the narrow opening in the bottle's neck - creating a stream powerful enough to launch the rocket into the air.
To keep a Hot air balloon in the sky indefinitely you must keep all the air sealed and warm. The Hot air's lower density will keep it above the more dense, colder air. To demonstrate this put air inside a bottle and place it on-top of water. Notice how it stays "afloat". ======================================================== To keep a hot air balloon aloft indefinitely, the temperature of the air inside the balloon must be hot enough so that the difference in weight of the air inside the balance and an equivaletnt volume outside of the balloon equals or exceeds the total weight of the balloon and passengers. It doesn have to be air tight. Hot air balloons are open on the bottom. But it has to be air tight enough that the burner will be capable of keeping the air hot enough to maintain altitude.
Yes! If you heat a bottle with hot water, the balloon would grow bigger and bigger while if you put it under cold water, you would find out that the balloon became deflated again.
If you filled the bottle with water and then poked the balloon with a pin, I believe it would pierce but not pop it. With the balloon pierced, all you would then have to do is drain the water from the bottle, maneuver the balloon toward its mouth and drain it, and then finish removing the balloon either by fishing or dropping it out of the bottle's mouth.
To conduct a yeast balloon experiment, you will need a balloon, a water bottle, warm water, sugar, active dry yeast, and a funnel. First, mix the warm water with sugar in the bottle, add yeast using the funnel, and stretch the balloon over the top of the bottle. As the yeast consumes the sugar and produces carbon dioxide, the balloon will inflate.
Air inside the bottle expands when the bottle is heated. Some of it leaves the bottle until the pressure of the heated air remaining in the bottle equals the pressure of the air in the room. The balloon is then placed over the neck of the bottle and prevents any more air from entering or leaving the bottle. The air inside the bottle cools to the temperature of the ice water. The cooler air inside the bottle takes less space (volume) than it did when hot, so it sucks the balloon inside the neck of the bottle. Air pressure inside the bottle causes the balloon to stretch and enlarge until the air pressure inside the bottle, including the air in the balloon, has the same pressure as the air in the room.
The hot water heats up the air inside the bottle, causing it to expand, forcing some of the air out of the bottle and into the balloon, causing it to inflate. The larger the bottle, the more air that will be pushed into the balloon. The air in the balloon will quickly cool and, since hot air is less dense and therefore rises, the cooler air is forced back into the bottle to be heated up. Eventually the air will be a constant temperature and the balloon will reach the limit of inflation. As the water cools, the air cools and the balloon begins to deflate.
When a bottle-and-balloon system is placed in hot water, the air inside the bottle expands due to an increase in temperature. Since the bottle is sealed off from the outside, the expanding air has nowhere to go, causing the balloon to inflate as a result of the increased pressure inside the bottle.
When the bottle is placed in hot water, the air inside expands due to the increased temperature. This causes the balloon to inflate as the air pressure inside the bottle increases.
when you but the bottle in hot water the balloon particles push apart and cause expansion
The balloon will inflate as the air inside the bottle warms up and expands, creating higher pressure in the bottle. This pressure pushes against the balloon, causing it to stretch and inflate. The energy transfers involved include the heat energy transferred from the hot water to the air in the bottle, then to the balloon, and finally to the elastic potential energy stored in the stretched balloon.
When the bottle is placed in hot water, the air inside it expands due to the increase in temperature. This expanded air flows into the balloon, causing it to inflate. The molecules of gas inside the bottle have more kinetic energy when heated, leading to increased pressure and volume, pushing the air into the balloon.
When the bottle is placed in hot water, the air inside the bottle will heat up and expand, creating an increase in pressure. This increased pressure will cause the balloon to inflate as the air molecules inside the bottle push against the stretched balloon. The energy transfers involve the transfer of heat energy from the hot water to the air inside the bottle, which then increases the kinetic energy of the air molecules, resulting in the inflation of the balloon.
This is described by Boyle's law which states that PV = nRT or in English, the product of pressure and volume is proportional to the temperature. Putting the bottle in hot water expands the gas in the bottle which inflates the balloon.