Why do helium-filled balloons
float?
A balloon floats because it has buoyancy, a lifting power given it
by the
gas
inside it. Some gases are heavier than air and some lighter.
It is only when a
balloon is filled with a gas lighter than the air outside it that it
will rise.
Carbon
dioxide,
which you blow into a balloon from your mouth is one such gas which
is lighter than air. Helium is another.
A
balloon filled with helium will stay airborne as long as the gas
inside and the equipment attached to it (basket, string, etc.) weigh
less than the air in which it is floating.
The balloon will rise until it reaches that height where the weight
of the air outside the balloon equals the weight of the air inside
it. At that point, it begins to float.
Gradually, though, the air inside does begin to leak out and the
balloon starts to fall to earth. |