Hair color itself does not affect balloon static electricity. The static electricity created when rubbing a balloon on hair is due to the friction between the two materials, not the color of the hair.
The hypothesis would be: The color of hair does not affect how much static electricity it can carry.
The hypothesis could be that hair color does impact the amount of static electricity it can carry. For example, blond hair may carry more static electricity compared to brown or black hair due to differences in the composition of the hair strands.
Static electricity itself does not have color. However, when static electricity causes a spark or discharge, the visible light emitted may appear as a color due to the gases present in the air. The color of the spark usually depends on the specific gases surrounding the discharge.
A charged object will attract an object that is neutral. Think about how you can make a balloon stick to a wool sweater. If you charge a balloon by rubbing it on your hair, it picks up extra electrons and has a negative charge. Holding it near a neutral object will make the charges in that object move. If it is a conductor, many electrons move easily to the other side, as far from the balloon as possible. If it is an insulator, the electrons in the atoms and molecules can only move very slightly to one side, away from the balloon. In either case, there are more positive charges closer to the negative balloon. Opposites attract. The balloon sticks. (At least until the electrons on the balloon slowly leak off.) It works the same way for neutral and positively charged objects. So what does all this have to do with static shocks? Or static electricity in hair? When you take off your wool hat, it rubs against your hair. Electrons move from your hair to the hat. A static charge builds up and now each of the hairs has the same positive charge. Remember, things with the same charge repel each other. So the hairs try to get as far from each other as possible. The farthest they can get is by standing up and away from the others. And that is how static electricity causes a bad hair day! (Get tips on how to eliminate static electricity problems in your home or office.) As you walk across a carpet, electrons move from the rug to you. Now you have extra electrons and a negative static charge. Touch a door knob and ZAP! The door knob is a conductor. The electrons jump from you to the knob, and you feel the static shock. We usually only notice static electricity in the winter when the air is very dry. During the summer, the air is more humid. The water in the air helps electrons move off you more quickly, so you can not build up as big a static charge.
Well i did an experiment, I used blond, gray, dyed and brown hair. The brown hair had more static electricity. I guessthe darker it is the more static it has.*Im not sure this is a guess!
The hypothesis would be: The color of hair does not affect how much static electricity it can carry.
The hypothesis could be that hair color does impact the amount of static electricity it can carry. For example, blond hair may carry more static electricity compared to brown or black hair due to differences in the composition of the hair strands.
Hair color is not a factor concerning static electricity .
purple green
Static electricity itself does not have color. However, when static electricity causes a spark or discharge, the visible light emitted may appear as a color due to the gases present in the air. The color of the spark usually depends on the specific gases surrounding the discharge.
i don't think its anything to do with colour, i think it's more to do with the thickness of the rubber and size of the balloon.
A charged object will attract an object that is neutral. Think about how you can make a balloon stick to a wool sweater. If you charge a balloon by rubbing it on your hair, it picks up extra electrons and has a negative charge. Holding it near a neutral object will make the charges in that object move. If it is a conductor, many electrons move easily to the other side, as far from the balloon as possible. If it is an insulator, the electrons in the atoms and molecules can only move very slightly to one side, away from the balloon. In either case, there are more positive charges closer to the negative balloon. Opposites attract. The balloon sticks. (At least until the electrons on the balloon slowly leak off.) It works the same way for neutral and positively charged objects. So what does all this have to do with static shocks? Or static electricity in hair? When you take off your wool hat, it rubs against your hair. Electrons move from your hair to the hat. A static charge builds up and now each of the hairs has the same positive charge. Remember, things with the same charge repel each other. So the hairs try to get as far from each other as possible. The farthest they can get is by standing up and away from the others. And that is how static electricity causes a bad hair day! (Get tips on how to eliminate static electricity problems in your home or office.) As you walk across a carpet, electrons move from the rug to you. Now you have extra electrons and a negative static charge. Touch a door knob and ZAP! The door knob is a conductor. The electrons jump from you to the knob, and you feel the static shock. We usually only notice static electricity in the winter when the air is very dry. During the summer, the air is more humid. The water in the air helps electrons move off you more quickly, so you can not build up as big a static charge.
id id this experiment quite a few time on 5th grade girls and found out that blonde is the most affected by static electricity
No, the texture and material would only not the color. the gas inside may too, if its too much or too little, but you might already know that :)
Static electricity can sometimes appear blue when it discharges in the form of a spark. The blue color is due to the excitation of nitrogen and oxygen molecules in the air, which emit light in the blue color range as they release energy. This phenomenon is similar to how neon lights produce their color.
Well i did an experiment, I used blond, gray, dyed and brown hair. The brown hair had more static electricity. I guessthe darker it is the more static it has.*Im not sure this is a guess!
I have recently done this experiment using 2nd grade girls and i found out blondes have WAY more static! :) Hope this helped