Movement of a balloon in dead air

In summary, the conversation discusses the experiments done with a helium balloon and a rock inside a car that is accelerating forward. It is observed that when the car takes off, both balloons move forward while the rock moves towards the rear. This is due to the artificial "buoyant force" created by the acceleration of the car. This force creates a pressure gradient in the air inside the car, resulting in the movement of the balloons. It is also noted that when the car is moving at a constant speed, the balloons and the rock stay in place relative to the car's motion. Additionally, when the car makes turns, the balloons and the rock move in opposite directions due to the centrifugal force. The conversation also mentions that without the string
  • #1
gary350
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I had a helium balloon in my car tied so it hangs down by string toughing nothing. Windows are rolled up. Heat and AC are off. Air inside the car is not moving and car is parked with motor running. When I step on the gas pedal and car takes off forward balloon goes forward towards the windshield.

Repeat the same experiment with air inside the balloon hanging from ceiling by string. When car takes off forward balloon goes forward too.

Next experiment hand a rock from ceiling with string just like the balloon when car takes off forward rocks goes to the rear and balloon goes forward.

Inertia makes the rock stay in place as the car takes off.

I assume inertia makes air in the car stay in place too this produces a high pressure area in the rear and low pressure area in front so air pressure pushed balloon forward?
 
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  • #2
It's not about inertia, it is about "up". The balloon goes up. What happens to "up" when the car is accelerating forward?
 
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  • #3
gary350 said:
I assume inertia makes air in the car stay in place too this produces a high pressure area in the rear and low pressure area in front so air pressure pushed balloon forward?
Yes, the force of buoyancy is opposite to the pressure gradient, which has a backward component due to the inertia of the air.
 
  • #4
russ_watters said:
What happens to "up" when the car is accelerating forward?
Nothing happens to "up", if I define "up" as vertical to the ground. Without defining "up", you explain nothing by talking about "up".
 
  • #5
A.T. said:
Nothing happens to "up", if I define "up" as vertical to the ground. Without defining "up", you explain nothing by talking about "up".
The context of what I said implies the definition I'm using. You aren't actually confused about it, are you? You don't actually think that definition of yours is better, much less even useful here, do you?

My approach here is to teach the broader principle first and push the OP to apply it, because it will be useful in other contexts. Sometimes teaching only to the question doesn't get there (er...though the OP does reference "down").
 
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  • #6
I think what Russ is alluding to is that, when the car is accelerating, "artificial gravity" is being created toward the rear of the compartment. This is a pseudo body force resulting from the use of an accelerating frame of reference. This artificial gravitational force creates a pressure gradient in the air within the compartment to accelerate it in the direction of motion (as reckoned from an inertial frame of reference). This, in turn, produces a horizontal artificial "buoyant force" on the objects within the compartment. The helium balloon moves toward the front of the car in response to this artificial "buoyant force." The rock, on the other hand, although experiencing the same buoyant force "sinks" toward the rear of the compartment under its own artificial gravitational (weight) force.
 
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  • #7
gary350 said:
I assume inertia makes air in the car stay in place too this produces a high pressure area in the rear and low pressure area in front so air pressure pushed balloon forward?
I would say that this explanation is exactly right.
 
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  • #8
jbriggs444 said:
I would say that this explanation is exactly right.
Fair enough. I guess my main concern was that citing inertia, while not wrong, seems superfluous. The acceleration vectors are the givens in the problem, so adding them together tells you the direction the balloon moves ("up") without using inertia. Using inertia will enable finding the magnitude of the pressure gradient and new buoyant force, but that wasn't asked.
 
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  • #9
Chestermiller said:
I think what Russ is alluding to is that, when the car is accelerating, "artificial gravity" is being created toward the rear of the compartment. This is a pseudo body force resulting from the use of an accelerating frame of reference.
Yes, though I do mean it more directly in that for most purposes I can think of, "up" is the direction of the acceleration vector. I don't think the qualifiers (pseudo, artificial) are necessary. If you don't have a clear view of the horizon or some other context clue, you can't even tell what is "pseudo" and what is "real(?)".
 
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  • #10
With an air filled balloon hanging from ceiling by a string and a helium filled balloon attached to the seat and the rock hanging from the ceiling too both balloons go forward when the car takes off and the rock goes to the rear.

The thing that convinced me air pressure inside the car is pushing both balloon around is, if car accelerates slow balloons go forward slow but if car accelerates fast both balloons shoot forward very fast. Rock has several time more mass than balloons plus very little wind resistance compared to balloons so rock always goes to the rear no matter what speed car accelerates. If car takes off very fast enough rock goes back and hits the ceiling and both balloons go forward and hit the front window.

Another interesting observation is while driving down the road at 50 or 60 mph rock and balloons hang there is place as long as car speed stays the same the mass of air inside the car is moving at the same speed of the car. If I drive 50 mph around a sharp curve to the left balloons move to the left while rock goes to the right.

I put 1 helium balloon inside the car with no string it stays up on the ceiling near center it is extremely hard to accelerate slow enough to keep the balloons in place on the ceiling. While driving along going places like Walmart etc balloons goes forward when car stops at traffic lights then goes to the rear as car takes off. Balloon goes left when car turns left then it goes right when car turns right.
 
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  • #11
 
  • #12
gary350 said:
The thing that convinced me air pressure inside the car is pushing both balloon around is
You realize that buoyancy and air pressure gradients are the same thing?
 
  • #13
gary350 said:
With an air filled balloon hanging from ceiling by a string and a helium filled balloon attached to the seat and the rock hanging from the ceiling too both balloons go forward when the car takes off and the rock goes to the rear.
Have you actually seen this happen? The hanging balloon should go backwards at the same angle as the rock. With a positive (up) net force (buoyancy - weight), the object should move/angle forward and with a negative net force it should move/angle back.
Rock has several time more mass than balloons plus very little wind resistance compared to balloons so rock always goes to the rear no matter what speed car accelerates.
Buoyancy, not wind resistance but otherwise yes. The buoyancy of the rock is typically ignored because in all cases we generally see, the rock is much, much denser than air. But the same principles/equations are at work for all the objects here.
 
  • #14
gary350 said:
I put 1 helium balloon inside the car with no string it stays up on the ceiling near center it is extremely hard to accelerate slow enough to keep the balloons in place on the ceiling.
The effect is magnified by the fact that the ceiling is near flat. The balloon is actually "seeking" a surface perpendicular to the force vector; a "ceiling" that is "up". This is why bubble levels are made nearly flat (it increases their sensitivity).
 
  • #15
russ_watters said:
Have you actually seen this happen? The hanging balloon should go backwards at the same angle as the rock.
If the air in the car were well stratified with hot on top and cold on bottom, buoyancy could drive the top air forward during acceleration, carrying both a helium balloon and an air balloon forward together. This would be wind pressure rather than direct buoyant force in action.
 
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  • #16
jbriggs444 said:
If the air in the car were well stratified with hot on top and cold on bottom, buoyancy could drive the top air forward during acceleration, carrying both a helium balloon and an air balloon forward together. This would be wind pressure rather than direct buoyant force in action.
Good point. Particularly when it is cold outside and you have the heat on (large gradients), you can feel the air in the car "slosh around" due to accelerations.
 
  • #17
jbriggs444 said:
If the air in the car were well stratified with hot on top and cold on bottom, buoyancy could drive the top air forward during acceleration, carrying both a helium balloon and an air balloon forward together. This would be wind pressure rather than direct buoyant force in action.
I have noticed this effect in a car on a cold morning. With the heater directed towards the windscreen, you can get hot air from the heater at head height and cold at steering wheel height. Turning hard left or right, accelerating hard or applying the brakes can warm up hands and cool the head as cold 'sloshes around' like water in a bucket and displaces the warm air up near the roof. (Best to use the fan at low speed for this)
 
  • #18
And sound travels faster in helium than air, when you talk it sounds funny = higher Hz.

Air & water both have mass so all balloons go forward when vehicle takes off forward.
 
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1. How does a balloon move in dead air?

A balloon moves in dead air by the principle of buoyancy. The balloon is filled with a gas that is less dense than the surrounding air, causing it to rise and move upwards.

2. Why does a balloon move in dead air?

A balloon moves in dead air because of the difference in density between the gas inside the balloon and the surrounding air. The less dense gas causes the balloon to have a positive buoyancy, making it rise and move upwards.

3. Can a balloon move horizontally in dead air?

No, a balloon cannot move horizontally in dead air. The balloon will only move vertically because of the buoyancy force acting on it. To move horizontally, the balloon would need to be propelled by an external force, such as wind or an engine.

4. What factors affect the movement of a balloon in dead air?

The movement of a balloon in dead air can be affected by the amount of gas inside the balloon, the weight of the balloon, and external factors such as wind or temperature. The shape and size of the balloon can also impact its movement.

5. How can we control the movement of a balloon in dead air?

The movement of a balloon in dead air can be controlled by adjusting the amount of gas inside the balloon, adding weights to the balloon, or using external devices such as a fan or propeller. Changes in temperature and wind conditions can also affect the movement of a balloon and can be controlled by choosing the right time and location for the balloon flight.

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