No it would be lighter
Imagine a 2 party balloons, one filled with helium and one jUst blown up
Which one weighs less?
Gas under high pressure
The bottle will just feel like a bottle full of air. In order for it to float like a balloon filled with helium, it would have to weigh less than air or you would need to fill the bottle to well over its capacity. 1 cubic meter of helium is required to lift 1kg.
When a balloon is filled with helium, it becomes buoyant because helium is lighter than the surrounding air. This causes the balloon to rise and float. The helium gas inside the balloon also increases the pressure, which helps the balloon maintain its shape and stay inflated.
In space, a helium-filled balloon will expand further due to the lack of air pressure outside the balloon. Eventually, the balloon will burst because the pressure from the helium inside will exceed the pressure outside.
That all depends how much helium you put in it. A basketball should be able to take the same amount of pressure, whether it's pressure from air or helium. So, if you inflate it only to the recommended pressure, it should be a problem. The same amount of pressure of helium will be less mass, so in the end the basketball will be lighter, as you would probably expect, by a very small amount.
Gas under high pressure
The relationship between helium pressure and its effects on gas-filled balloons is that as the pressure of helium inside the balloon increases, the balloon expands and rises. This is because the higher pressure of helium pushes against the walls of the balloon, causing it to inflate and float.
No. At the same pressure, a helium filled balloon will be less dense than an air-filled balloon.
The bottle will just feel like a bottle full of air. In order for it to float like a balloon filled with helium, it would have to weigh less than air or you would need to fill the bottle to well over its capacity. 1 cubic meter of helium is required to lift 1kg.
When a balloon is filled with helium, it becomes buoyant because helium is lighter than the surrounding air. This causes the balloon to rise and float. The helium gas inside the balloon also increases the pressure, which helps the balloon maintain its shape and stay inflated.
In space, a helium-filled balloon will expand further due to the lack of air pressure outside the balloon. Eventually, the balloon will burst because the pressure from the helium inside will exceed the pressure outside.
Elephant. :)
That all depends how much helium you put in it. A basketball should be able to take the same amount of pressure, whether it's pressure from air or helium. So, if you inflate it only to the recommended pressure, it should be a problem. The same amount of pressure of helium will be less mass, so in the end the basketball will be lighter, as you would probably expect, by a very small amount.
Larger (the air pressure is dropping as it rises).
As the helium-filled balloon rises into the atmosphere, the surrounding air pressure decreases while the pressure inside the balloon remains the same. This causes the helium inside the balloon to expand, making the balloon increase in size. Eventually, the balloon will reach a point where the difference in pressure between the inside and outside of the balloon will be equal, and it will float at that altitude.
Industrial deep-sea divers must breathe a mixture of helium and oxygen to prevent a disorienting condition known as nitrogen narcosis. If a diver's tank is filled with a helium-oxygen mixture to a pressure of 170 atmospheres and the partial pressure of helium is 110 atmospheres, the partial pressure of the oxygen is ? - is the question The answer is 60. Total pressure minus the partial pressure= 170-110= 60.
The helium bottle doesn't float away because it is denser than the helium inside it. The bottle is designed to be heavier than the buoyant force acting on it due to the helium, which keeps it grounded. Additionally, the bottle is typically secured to prevent accidental flight.