The balloon will contract.
When the internal pressure in a balloon falls, the balloon get smaller and less buoyant.
The air in the balloon will have a difficult time expanding to fill the bottle because the bottle is already filled with air at atmospheric pressure, which creates resistance. The pressure inside the balloon needs to overcome the pressure inside the bottle in order for the balloon to expand and fill the bottle.
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.
If you put an inflated balloon in a jar and then remove the air from the jar the balloon will expand. Perhaps to the point of bursting, or to the point where it coats the entire inner surface of the jar.
Yes, when you fill a balloon with air, you are displacing the air that was originally inside the balloon with the new air. This is an example of the principle of displacement.
When you fill a balloon with air, the air molecules displace the surrounding space inside the balloon, causing the balloon to expand and stretch. The pressure of the air inside the balloon exceeds the pressure outside, creating tension in the balloon material, which keeps it inflated.
it sinks
When the internal pressure in a balloon falls, the balloon get smaller and less buoyant.
Filling a balloon with pure oxygen can be dangerous as oxygen accelerates combustion. It can create a highly flammable environment, increasing the risk of fire or explosion. It is not recommended to fill balloons with pure oxygen.
The air in the balloon will have a difficult time expanding to fill the bottle because the bottle is already filled with air at atmospheric pressure, which creates resistance. The pressure inside the balloon needs to overcome the pressure inside the bottle in order for the balloon to expand and fill the bottle.
You fill up the balloon by asking G for the super helium.
When helium is used to fill a balloon, it expands to fill the space inside the balloon due to its low density. The helium gas takes the shape of the balloon because it moves and distributes evenly throughout the balloon's interior.
As the water boils, it creates steam which increases the pressure inside the sealed jar. This increased pressure causes the air inside the balloon to expand, filling more of the jar.
Yes
The air inside a balloon takes the shape of the balloon itself. It expands to fill the space within the balloon, conforming to its size and shape.
air?
I personally fill a balloon with my breath, the balloons I buy are already filled with helium.