Yes
Before precipitation can fall to Earth's surface, water vapor in the atmosphere must condense and form clouds. Once the clouds reach a point where they can no longer hold the condensed water, precipitation such as rain, snow, sleet, or hail will fall to the surface.
No, a foley catheter balloon is designed to stay inflated inside the bladder to prevent it from falling out unintentionally. If the balloon were to deflate or malfunction, it could potentially lead to the catheter slipping out of the bladder.
Adding soap to lakes and rivers might create more bubbles in the water, but it is unlikely to make it rain bubbles. Rain is formed when water vapor in the atmosphere condenses to form liquid droplets, which then fall to the ground as precipitation. Soap in water bodies would likely just create a soapy mess, rather than causing bubbles to fall as rain.
Balloons fall instead of float when they are either not filled with a lighter-than-air gas, like helium or hydrogen, or when they are filled with a denser gas, like air. Additionally, if a balloon has a hole or is damaged, the gas inside can escape, causing it to lose buoyancy and fall. Furthermore, the weight of the balloon material itself can also contribute to its inability to float.
Water drops that fall when the temperature is below freezing, fall as SNOW . Water drops that fall when the temperature is above freezing fall as RAIN .
Unless it was a human made water fall and the water gets purified you would want to boil and clean the water before drinking the water.
Where you originally threw it.
The rubber of the balloon will melt and burn. Then once the rubber has a hole melted in it the water will fall out and put out the fire.
throw them at people , have a water ballon battle, put them on top on doors so when they open they fall on the person who opened it, that's all I can think of
Helium filled balloons eventually fall because the helium molecules escape from the envelope of the balloon, both at the neck of the balloon and through the material of the balloon itself. The same occurs with air-filled balloons but air-filled balloons do not float to begin with -- they fall to the ground no matter how much air you put in them. In order to float, the gas within the balloon must be lighter (less dense) than the gas outwith the balloon. Inflating a balloon with the same density of gas that surrounds it will not make it float upward because the weight of the balloon alone will make it fall under gravity. Moreover, the elasticity of the balloon compresses the gas within, making it much denser, and therefore heavier.
When you release a balloon that is filled with air, the density of the balloon is higher than the air surrounding it. As a result, gravity pulls the balloon down towards the floor. The buoyant force acting on the balloon is not strong enough to overcome the force of gravity, causing the balloon to fall instead of float.
there is a balloon next to the water fall when you go past the snow place you go down to the waterfall and then you go up the hill next to the giant log and there are three trees there the balloon is there.
If there is warm air in the balloon, cooler air makes the balloon rise and if there is cold air in the balloon warmer air makes the balloon fall.
Helium diffuses through te balloon skin, out of the balloon, and its bouyancy therefore decreases.
When a balloon is filled with helium or hot air, it rises because it is lighter than the surrounding air. Rain falls when water droplets in clouds become large enough to overcome air resistance and gravity, making them too heavy for the air to support. The raindrops fall downward due to gravity, and they do not have the properties needed to make the balloon float.
There is a flap at the top of the balloon :)
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.