gas and solid are both filled with hot air balloweens
Hot air balloons typically use propane gas as a fuel source for the burner that heats the air inside the balloon envelope. The propane is burned to heat the air, which causes the balloon to rise.
A hot air balloon uses heated air to generate lift, while a gas balloon uses a lighter-than-air gas, such as helium or hydrogen. Hot air balloons are propelled by wind currents, while gas balloons can be steered to some extent using ballast and vents. However, gas balloons typically have longer flight durations compared to hot air balloons.
Hot air balloons are typically filled with hot air, rather than a gas, in order to make them buoyant and rise in the air. The air inside the balloon is heated by a burner attached to the basket, which causes the balloon to lift off the ground.
Helium-filled balloons last longer than hot air balloons. Helium is a non-flammable, inert gas that does not expand or contract with temperature changes like hot air does. Hot air balloons require periodic reheating to maintain altitude, whereas helium balloons will gradually lose lift over time but can remain buoyant for days.
Hot air balloons are filled with heated air, which expands and has less density than the surrounding air, so that the ballon floats upward -- until it cools back down. Hot air balloons usually carry a stove, to keep heating the air (which rises into the balloon, displacing the cooler air and pushing it out of the ballon -- this is an example of convection). Hydrogen balloons are filled with hydrogen gas, which is much less dense than air, so that it rises -- unless the hydrogen leaks out. Hydrogen is not only difficult to keep from leaking out, but also quite flammable and can explode if there is a spark nearby. Also: Helium balloons work similarly to hydrogen balloons, except that helium is not flammable, it is slightly denser than hydrogen, and it is rare and hard to find on Earth. The sun is composed primarily of hydrogen and helium, and the fusion process that makes it radiate comes from transforming hydrogen into helium, with a large release of energy.
No, hot air balloons, as the name suggests, contain hot air, not helium.
A hot air balloon contains helium. M. Saffi.Ullah
Balloons contain helium or hot air.
There are traditional hot air balloons, special-shaped hot air balloons (such as animals, objects, or characters), and solar-powered hot air balloons that use solar energy to heat the air inside.
Hot air balloons typically use propane gas as a fuel source for the burner that heats the air inside the balloon envelope. The propane is burned to heat the air, which causes the balloon to rise.
which gas is in ballons
A hot air balloon uses heated air to generate lift, while a gas balloon uses a lighter-than-air gas, such as helium or hydrogen. Hot air balloons are propelled by wind currents, while gas balloons can be steered to some extent using ballast and vents. However, gas balloons typically have longer flight durations compared to hot air balloons.
hydrogen, helium, hot air
Hot air balloons are typically filled with hot air, rather than a gas, in order to make them buoyant and rise in the air. The air inside the balloon is heated by a burner attached to the basket, which causes the balloon to lift off the ground.
they contain helium molecules which are lighter than the air we breath making the balloons rise
No, hot air balloons are typically filled with hot air to become buoyant and rise. Helium is an alternative gas used in some balloons, like party balloons or weather balloons, due to its lighter weight than air.
Helium-filled balloons last longer than hot air balloons. Helium is a non-flammable, inert gas that does not expand or contract with temperature changes like hot air does. Hot air balloons require periodic reheating to maintain altitude, whereas helium balloons will gradually lose lift over time but can remain buoyant for days.