Yes, the more temperature an object has the farther apart the molecules move.
All balloons expand in heat.
Expand due to the heat, causing them to sag or droop, potentially increasing the risk of contact with trees or other objects.
Being made up of infra red rays which will move in all directions and refract when hitting paticles heat will always expand
It is a matter of timing. The correct answer is most likely yes. At some scale all objects would expand before exploding. If you were to watch a bomb go off on a video and watched on a film that captued 20 frames a second you would not see it expand. If it captured 500 frames per second, again you may not see it. At 10,000 frames per second (not possable that I am aware of) you would watch the bomb expand prior to the skin of it rupturing. If a bomb exploded but did not have enough explosives in it, it would most certainly just expand and not rupture (explode)
Yes, latex balloons can expand in heat due to the air inside them expanding as it heats up. This can cause the balloon to inflate further and potentially burst if exposed to too much heat.
Maike Billitis's birth name is Maike Schulze.
Maike Nollen was born in 1977.
Maike Bollow is 168 cm.
All balloons expand in heat.
Maike Oergel has written: 'Culture and Identity'
Maike Thomsen was born in 1980, in Bielefeld, Germany.
Maike von Bremen is 166 cm.
Maike Maier was born on July 29, 1971.
Maike Meijer's birth name is Maike Elise Meijer.
yes, the heat makes the particles move and in the heat they expand.
Maike Roder-Thiede has written: 'Chinchillas'
No, not all objects expand when heated. Most objects do expand when heated, but there are exceptions such as water between 0°C and 4°C, which contracts when heated. The expansion or contraction of an object when heated depends on its material properties.