How Vacuums Work - podcast episode cover

How Vacuums Work

Dec 15, 20082 min
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Episode description

If a balloon was filled by a vacuum -- rather than helium or air -- would it float? Check out this HowStuffWorks podcast to learn the science behind balloons and vacuum.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from how stuff works dot com where smart Happens. Hi, I'm Marshall Brain with today's question, what a balloon filled with vacuum instead of helium float? At sea level? Air weighs about one point to five grams per leader. A leader of helium, on the other hand, weighs about point one eight grams. If you weigh a one leader bottle filled with air and then weigh the same bottle filled with helium, it will weigh about one

gram less. If the bottle itself weighed less than a gram, you couldn't weigh it at all because it would float. You would have to turn the scale upside down and put it above the floating bottle to check its negative weight. Generally, a balloon has to be several leaders in size before that one gram per leader weight difference of helium versus air is enough to overcome the weight of the balloon

itself and float. If you could somehow fill a one leader bottle with a vacuum, it would float even better. A perfect vacuum ways zero grams, so a leader of perfect vacuum ways zero grams, and that's point one eight grams less than a leader of helium. The problem, of course, is that building a lightweight container that can hold a vacuum is not nearly as easy as building a container that can hold helium. The phrase nature of horrors of

vacuum sums it up nicely. If you could figure out a way to do it, however, you could be set your vacuum balloon would float even better than a helium balloon. Not that you don't need to have a perfect vacuum for this to work. Any air that you take out of the container helps a vacuum balloon to float. Do you have any ideas or suggestions for this podcast? If so, please send me an email at podcast at how stuff

works dot com. For more on this and thousands of other topics, go to how stuff works dot com.

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