Gravity Change by Canister Pressure: Gas in Balloon

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The discussion explores the theoretical implications of compressing gas in a balloon with a solid canister and its effect on gravity and buoyancy. While compressing the gas would create a negligible change in gravity due to potential energy, it would alter the buoyancy of the gas, affecting the net force. An accelerometer placed above the balloon would not detect significant changes unless moved closer to the gas's center of mass. DIY experiments to measure gravity changes are challenged by the subtlety of the forces involved, which are difficult to isolate from Earth's gravity. Ultimately, precise measurements of gravitational changes require advanced equipment and are not feasible with typical DIY setups.
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If I had a balloon full of gas, and inside that balloon a solid canister that had a much smaller volume than the balloon but could hold all the gas inside the balloon under pressure, would there be a (detectable or theoretical) change in the gravity generated by forcing all the gas into the canister under pressure?
 
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Yes, due to the potential energy created, but it would be negligable. However, it would change the bouyancy of the gas, due to the reduction in volume, so the net force on the gas would change.
 
Would I be able to detect this change with an accelerometer placed immediately above the balloon?
 
ANarwhal said:
Would I be able to detect this change with an accelerometer placed immediately above the balloon?

What is it that the accelerometer would be measuring?
 
The acceleration towards a point, in this case it would be both the Earth and the compressed gas (due to its heightened gravitational pull (I'm not for a second saying it would be a big gravitational pull, I'm just interested in measuring it))
 
ANarwhal said:
The acceleration towards a point, in this case it would be both the Earth and the compressed gas (due to its heightened gravitational pull (I'm not for a second saying it would be a big gravitational pull, I'm just interested in measuring it))

If I correctly understand what your saying, then no I don't see how there would be any difference UNLESS the accelerometer moved closer to the center of mass of the gas, since that would cause a tiny increase in the gravity measured by the accelerometer (the amount would not be measurable with anything like today's technology but it would exist)
 
Is there any way I can create a change in gravity that I could monitor with DIY lab equipment?
 
ANarwhal said:
Is there any way I can create a change in gravity that I could monitor with DIY lab equipment?

I don't have any answer for that but I'll bet some of the more clever folks here will.
 
ANarwhal said:
Is there any way I can create a change in gravity that I could monitor with DIY lab equipment?

You have to define what you mean by "change in gravity". If you mean change in the gravitational force felt by some object, then...yes...it's very easy, you just change the mass of that object (cut off a piece of it), the gravitational force will reduce. Take a piece of putty and weigh it, and then cut off a piece and weigh it again, the lower reading shows a reduction in the gravitational force...

But I suspect this is not what you mean.
 
  • #10
Matterwave said:
But I suspect this is not what you mean.

Right ... I was going to suggest that he eat a Big Mac and then reweigh himself, but I came to the same conclusion that you did so bit my tongue.:smile:
 
  • #11
I want to detect a change without touching the object (for example, an accelerometer dangling above an object)
 
  • #12
I don't think you'll be able to do that w/ DIY equipment because the change will be very subtle almost whatEVER you do, relative to the gravity of the earth, which you can't remove from the experiment.

For example, I believe that the discovery and mapping of mascons in the Earth required very sensitive instruments and you are NOT going to come close to producing a mascon.
 
  • #13
The theory is simple. You hang a mass from a spring and bring another mass up close below it. The spring will stretch slightly and you use Hooke's law to measure the force. Then you try again with a smaller mass and you'll see a smaller stretch.

The problem is how weak gravity is. Two 1000kg masses with their centers separated by 1m (think about the size of a 1000kg mass) produce around a 0.07mN force. Any spring balance sensitive enough to detect this will snap when you attach a 1000kg mass. If you try a smaller mass then the force goes down (so harder to measure) and (in a double whammy) the system becomes extremely sensitive to thermal noise - draughts, Brownian motion, cars passing in the street, earthquakes thousands of miles away, etc, etc.

Measuring g between two known masses is the way we calculate G. The pros take years to make a measurement, and they frequently disagree. You could be decades at this and get nothing but noise - sorry.

Easier: track planetary motions and confirm that the orbits match predictions from theory. More maths and more indirect, but practicable for the dedicated hobbyist, I would think, given that Kepler and Newton have already done the heavy lifting.
 
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