The Hindenburg was a giant balloon airship filled with hydrogen gas for buoyancy.
Hydrogen is the lightest of all gasses and has a mass of only half the mass of helium gas, so it worked well to lift the mass of the airship. The Hindenburg disaster took place on Thursday, May 6, 1937, and part of the disaster was due to the hydrogen gas catching fire. Helium would not catch fire since it is an inert gas.
The Hindenburg airship was filled with hydrogen gas, specifically about 7 million cubic feet of hydrogen. This highly flammable gas was used as a lifting agent to help the airship float.
No. All three are so-called "lighter than air" machines, because they're filled with gases that make tham buoyant in normal atmosphere. But the gases are different. The Hindenburg was filled with hydrogen, and was destroyed in 1937, in a catastrophe so deadly and so graphic that hydrogen was never again used to float airships. Blimps today, including the Goodyears, are floated with helium. And hot-air balloons, as the name implies, are floated with . . . . .
Yes, you can make a balloon fly using propellers or an electric motor to provide thrust. By attaching a propeller or motor to the balloon, you can create lift and propulsion to make it fly without the need for hot air or helium.
On May 6th 1937, the hydrogen filled Hindenburg Aireship bust into flames while landing in New Jersey, USA. The hydrogen was viewed as the culprit for many years. Extensive recent research has however, discovered thathydrogen did not cause the initial fire. The actual cause was the high flammability of the fabric cover. It was made of a cotton substrate wth an aluminised cellulose acetate butyrate covering. The observations at the scene were consistant with a huge aluminium fire. The fabric was ignited by electrical activity in the atmosphere The hydrogen only exploded once the fire had burnt through the covering.
Balloons filled with hydrogen do not rise indefinitely because there is a point where the density of the surrounding air matches the density of the hydrogen in the balloon, causing the balloon to reach equilibrium and stop rising. Additionally, factors like temperature and atmospheric pressure can also affect the balloon's ability to keep rising.
No, the Hindenburg was filled with hydrogen, not helium. Hydrogen is highly flammable and was a contributing factor to the 1937 Hindenburg airship disaster.
passengers and hydrogen
Because it gets filled with hydrogen and it causes it to rise since it gets how. As we know hot air rises. Because it gets filled with hydrogen and it causes it to rise since it gets how. As we know hot air rises.
No, the Hindenburg airship was filled with hydrogen gas, not helium. The use of hydrogen was a factor in the Hindenburg disaster, as the highly flammable gas led to the airship catching fire and crashing in 1937.
Hydrogen.
The Hindenburg was filled with the element Hydrogen, which is extremely flammable. A spark ignited the hydrogen, which caused the skin of the zeppelin to burn furiously. The hydrogen fueled the inferno.
Helium was more suitable but not available in Germany before the war.
The Hindenburg should have used helium gas instead of hydrogen gas. Helium is non-flammable, unlike hydrogen, which was a major factor contributing to the Hindenburg disaster.
Hydrogen
Hydrogen.
"This gas" is hydrogen, correct? The property that contributed to the Hindenburg Disaster is flammability.
Hydrogen gas was used to inflate the Hindenburg.