As you fill a balloon with air, the rubber stretches to accommodate the increased volume of air inside. The pressure inside the balloon increases, causing it to expand and inflate. If you continue to fill it with more air, eventually the rubber may reach its limit and the balloon could burst.
Helium is less dense than air, so a balloon filled with helium is lighter than the same volume of air. This buoyancy force allows the helium-filled balloon to rise. On the other hand, a balloon filled with air has the same density as the surrounding air, so there is no buoyant force to make it rise.
The duration an air-filled balloon stays inflated can vary based on factors such as the quality of the balloon, temperature, and air pressure. Under normal conditions, an air-filled balloon can stay inflated for several days to a week before starting to deflate.
When you squeeze an air-filled balloon, the air inside gets compressed, causing an increase in pressure. If the pressure becomes too high, the balloon may pop.
Yes, sound can pass through a balloon filled with air. The sound waves will travel through the air inside the balloon and vibrate the balloon's surface, creating sound on the other side.
No, a balloon without air would weigh less than a balloon filled with air. The weight of an object is determined by the mass of the object and without the air filling the balloon, there is less mass present, therefore less weight.
It is filled with heated air. Since air is mostly nitrogen, a hot air balloon is mostly filled with nitrogen.
Helium is less dense than air, so a balloon filled with helium is lighter than the same volume of air. This buoyancy force allows the helium-filled balloon to rise. On the other hand, a balloon filled with air has the same density as the surrounding air, so there is no buoyant force to make it rise.
air
No it decreases
Putting an air-filled balloon in a refrigerator will cause it to shrink.
A water balloon is filled with water, and other balloons are filled with air or helium.
The duration an air-filled balloon stays inflated can vary based on factors such as the quality of the balloon, temperature, and air pressure. Under normal conditions, an air-filled balloon can stay inflated for several days to a week before starting to deflate.
The balloon expands.
No. Helium is lighter than air
When you squeeze an air-filled balloon, the air inside gets compressed, causing an increase in pressure. If the pressure becomes too high, the balloon may pop.
A typical hot air balloon is filled with the same air we breath.
Yes, sound can pass through a balloon filled with air. The sound waves will travel through the air inside the balloon and vibrate the balloon's surface, creating sound on the other side.