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- From: u108502@beta.lanl.gov (Andrew Poutiatine)
- Subject: Re: Do Balloons fly?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov5.152953.18781@newshost.lanl.gov>
- Sender: news@newshost.lanl.gov
- Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory
- References: <9211021802.AA29403@anubis.network.com> <1992Nov3.175155.27867@impmh.uucp> <1992Nov5.130316.28438@kth.se>
- Date: Thu, 5 Nov 1992 15:29:53 GMT
- Lines: 22
-
- In article <1992Nov5.130316.28438@kth.se> e92_anh@vaxkab.lne.kth.se () writes:
- >This will probably sound like a silly question to a lot of you, but WHY
- >does a helium-filled balloon rise upward? Is it because of the
- >difference in air-pressure at the balloon's top and bottom, causing the
- >resulting force to press it upward?
- >
- >Thus, consider this: If the air surrounding the balloon had exactly the
- >same density on all sides, then the balloon would not move (I think).
- >
- >So, is my airpressure-theory correct? I'd very much like to know!
- >
- > -Andre' Heinonen, Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
-
-
- Yes, you are exactly right, it is the pressure differential (gradient), that
- causes a balloon to float. Note that bouyancy is predicted in the hydro-
- static equations, even if one assumes a constant density fluid, with no
- spacial or temporal density variations. Even for constant density fluids,
- a hydrostatic pressure gradient is required for static equilibrium in a
- gravitational field.
-
- -AIP
-