The air inside expands.
it evaporates which means it turns into water vapour
what happens is that all the heat is taken out of the refrigerator, leaving it cool on the inside and warm on the outside.
The balloon may lose some air during that half hour.Also, at a lower temperature, the remaining air uses less space.
Very warm.
If you feel behind a fridge, you will feel the warm air. This warmth is from the inside of the fridge as the inside is cooled, and from the pump.
When a balloon full of air is moved from a cold place to a warm place, the air inside the balloon will warm up and expand. This causes the balloon to inflate further and possibly burst if the pressure inside the balloon becomes too high.
When a balloon is placed in a warm room, the air molecules inside the balloon receive more energy and move faster, causing them to expand and increase the pressure inside the balloon. This leads to the balloon inflating and appearing larger than before.
The water inside the balloon will heat up and expand as the temperature increases. This will create pressure inside the balloon, potentially causing it to burst if the expansion is too great.
The air inside cools. Cool air shrinks. The balloon gets smaller.
When a balloon is warmed up, the air inside it expands, causing the balloon to inflate. This is because the molecules in the air move more quickly and spread out when heated, creating more pressure inside the balloon. If the balloon gets too hot, it may burst due to the increased pressure.
it sinks
The warm temperature inside the greenhouse can cause the air molecules inside the balloon to expand, increasing the pressure inside. This can lead to the balloon either expanding in size or potentially bursting.
When you put an inflated balloon in a warm room, the air molecules inside the balloon gain kinetic energy and move faster, causing them to exert more pressure on the balloon walls. This increased pressure may cause the balloon to expand slightly as it absorbs some of the heat energy from the room.
When a balloon is placed in ice, the air inside it cools down and contracts, causing the balloon to deflate slightly. As the air molecules lose energy and move closer together, the volume of the balloon decreases. Once the balloon is removed from the ice and allowed to warm back up, the air inside it expands, causing the balloon to reinflate.
The air molecules inside the balloon will heat up and move faster, increasing the pressure inside the balloon. This will cause the balloon to expand and grow in size.
When a balloon is moved from a warm to a cold temperature, the air inside the balloon cools down and contracts, causing a decrease in pressure. This pressure drop leads to the balloon deflating as the air molecules move closer together and take up less space inside the balloon.
Nothing happens to the mass of the balloon. Mass is conserved, so the temperature of the balloon will not affect it's mass. Mass can be thought of the amount of "stuff" that makes up a balloon. It can be obtained by adding up the mass of all the molecules of rubber in the balloon. Obviously, putting the balloon in a warm room will not change the number of molecules in the balloon, therefore the mass stays constant. The volume of the balloon will probably increase. Because volume increases but mass remains constant, the density of the balloon would decrease. D = m/v