Sorry Astronauts-Helium Falls in Space
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 12 окт 2022
- Shop for science gear here: theactionlab.com/
I show you what helium balloons do if there is no air around them
See the full video here: • Will Helium Filled Bal...
Subscribe to my other channel here: / theactionlab
#shorts
This man just killed the hopes and dreams of so many astronauts that wanted to take balloons in space.
Indeed man, astronauts r retards
I got triggered when you say that 3 word
This man killed the dreams of kids who wanted to use baloons to go to space...
But the actual space doesn't have gravity, whats going on?
@Mr. Think then which direction will the balloons go? Since in the video it goes downward cause we're one earth, i get that the balloon will not float away on its own in space, it should stay stationary, no?
I remember asking my 6th grade teacher "where does helium go in space?" She didn't comprehend my question.
it goes everywhere. your question did not mention balloon.
@KSG this isn't true. The rate at which helium is escapes is extremely slow. Helium shortages happen when helium plants shut down.
What we are running out of is the federal helium reserve. Helium is so easy to obtain nowadays that the US government has decided to let private companies produce it and is trying to get rid of its stockpile
Edit: Forgot to mention that we can also make helium through any radioactive decay, as He-4 is identical to an alpha particle. As long as there is any radioactive substance on earth, there will be helium. Worst case scenario we can try to do nuclear fusion with hydrogen obtained from the electrolysis of water to artificially make helium too
@@yeasstt what about the tom scott video
@@yeasstt This is so incomprehensibly wrong I don't even know where to begin.
@@drunkenhobo8020 Enlighten us bro. Don't leave us hanging!
I like how the one balloon was confused after reintroduces to air
**Phrueruirueorrororoorororoeoeoeoeororoeioeorororrirrruururururuururururruururuuuuuuuuuuuuu intensifies**
it is drowning
No birthdays in space confirmed. Top tier science
😂 I guess if they fill the balloons up with regular air, not helium, they'll float? I mean since everything else does?
@@YourCapyBra_3Dpipesa90sspecial yea maybe hydrogen
@@WanderingMerchantPG3D it's still less dense
@@Monkey_Luffy01 wym?
Less dense than what?..
@@mucia55 less than oxygen
Hydrogen is 16 times less dense than oxygen!
Man where is a balloon gonna *fall* in outer space
falling is when something gets pulled by the gravity of something, so it still applies in space.
on the moon where there is no air it will fall to surface
In space, it'll fall unless it's orbiting somethings
Most importantly, in space, nobody is going to hear it pop 🔪
Ikr💀
Helium wouldn't fall in space if there is no gravity. The title of the video should be Helium falls in a vacuum.
There is always some gravity. Everything in space is falling towards something else.
@@Zveebo If you are in the middle distance between two galaxies or in the middle of the Boötes void, the effect would be almost not noticiable.
No, since he used the example on the moon he should put that in the title!
@@nielsdaemen YES!
Your correction has the same issue b/c helium wouldn't fall in a vacuum if there was no gravity. . . it's almost like it doesn't really matter and the point came across anyway
That one kid who accidentally made his helium balloon fly away: So there still is a chance.
Homie, he gonna take away our atmosphere killing all the human race just for the chance to get a balloon back, justified
Helium: a legitimate substance used in industrial technology
People: hehe, floaty go brrr
Best comment! Lol!
Helium makes your voice beautiful
>vacuum chamber.
>air around the balloon... l
*confused screaming*
*confused astronaut noises* “when did we say helium floats in space?”
They wouldn’t fall in space, they fall in the vacuum chamber because of the gravitational pull of earth. In space it would stay where it is.
There is gravity in space too.
the Moon feels offended
😂😂😂@@Nebulisuzer
now add a tiny bit of nitrogen back in to make them neutrally buoyant
Impossible to get it exactly neutral. And why did you say nitrogen and not air?
@@nielsdaemen air is majority nitrogen
@@chitorunya *claps*
@@chewinggum5550 cheeks
@@chitorunya what was your point again? It will be more than ONLY nitrogen when adding air into the chamber.
The way the ballon shakes like a Floridian drug addict I cant💀
Oh that's why I can't float good to know
I don’t get the joke
@@alex.g7317 same
@@alex.g7317 he is denser than the environment around him, so he can't walk on it, which is why he can't float
@@duncanchillake8024 cant walk on what?
@@alex.g7317 air
I find this so interesting, it's the same reason as to why a hammer and a feather drop at the same speed on the moon.
On the Moon a helium balloon a hammer and a feather would all fall at the same rate; 1.62 m/s².
yea cuz no air resistance
@@ikilledaman and no buoyancy
If a helium balloon pops in a vacuum, does it make a sound?
I get this is a joke but in case anyone doesn't know this and is wondering no because vacuums don't have particles or atoms for the vibrations to travel through so everything in a vacuum is completely silent
@@josephmurphy417 actually, the balloon popping could create sound as the particles from the balloon travel in a wave to your ear.
@@demonfreeman3018 no sorry but there aren't enough particles to support sound vibration plus it needs to be a solid line of particles from the balloon to your eardrum which is why even if a whole rocket exploded it'd be completely silent since as soon as it begins breaking the particles are all sucked out and scattered across the vacuum making incomplete chains that can't reach your ears to make sound because the constant separation of the particles due to the vacuum instantly stops the vibrations at the source
@@josephmurphy417 I know it's said that there's no sound in space. But if you put a microphone inside the vacuum chamber, would it pick up anything from the expanding helium?
Edit: Now I'm thinking there should be sound if it pops inside a vacuum chamber, as a balloon will probably pop before there is a complete vacuum. But what would happen if you put a microphone right next to a balloon or exploding object in space?
Good chat
This was a good short--right up to the "Sorry, astronauts." line.
I lost it at the sad astronaut image
Astronauts in the International Space Station: no we know..
think of air as water, it’s easier to think of it that way
A litle bit of static "Baloon violently vibrating*
Idk why, but the balloon spazzing out after the air was reintroduced was hilarious to me.
I was starting to wonder if your vacuum chamber was okay. Glad to see it again.
Sorry, Action Lab - Helium balloons can’t fall in space without gravity
Ruined all my plans , Is there even a point to have birthday party in space now ...
Wait a minute finally something that makes sense
No wonder no one has birthdays on the moon
What do you mean sorry? That sounds like budget space tennis to me
"... Sorry astronauts". What? Didn't they know that?
For those 3 people that are still struggling after seeing this short:
The reason why helium goes up is because it wants to floats on air like wood on water, making air less dense makes the helium fall because the less dense air is lighter than the helium.
Meanwhile astronaut: Yeah.. ok ( flips himself upside down)
If this was in a physics quiz I would have 100% gotten the outcome wrong
This is basically the physics of weather balloons as they reach the thinnest parts of the atmosphere.
Makes sense, helium still has a weight, it's just buoyant
They would be able to play soccer on the moon! 😂
Helium falls on Earth too. It just lifts faster than it falls 😜
You thought the astronauts didn't know that??
I was so ready in case a ballon pops
Remeber space has no gravity so it won’t go up or down it will just stay in the same place
I think this is one of the few things I actually knew already for once.
BTW, vacuum is the most buoyant in air. the problem is, it's a bit hard to find a material light enough to allow the vacuum to float without caving into itself under the negative pressure.
Helium is less dense than air
But with no air helium is heavy
When I asked myself this question. Action lab came to mind for the answer, but I googled it didnt understand the wording. Only to eventually search on youtube and boom! he actually did it and showed the process. Thank you very much. I am your number 1 supporter here in Trinidad and Tobago.
I love how the balloon was breakdancing when the air got back in
So helium can't just drift off to space, but would stay at a point. That is if the balloon doesn't pop like they usually do.
When you just started learning density...
GRAVITY?💀
Funny how NASA & space tech is the worlds biggest users of Helium.
Gravity doing tricks as usual
Well, if it's in space, there should be zero gravity, where everything floats......
This one was just common sense
"Sorry Astronauts",saying it as if he knows even one Astronaut or the power of their innovation.
Sound like an idea for doofensmirtz on how to get his bloon back
People on the space station are going to be very disappointed
So if it doesn't pop... Does that mean that a balloon would be trapped between space and earth forever?
not forever, but for quite a while tho...
The shape of dat ting during vacuum tho 😳🤨
HOW WILL I HAVE MY SPACE BIRTHDAY PARTY NOW
Fun fact: the minimum volume needed for you to float in water is ~1 cubic foot. Since air is 1000x less dense, you'd need a balloon with at least ~1000 cubic feet to float in the air (think of a cube 10x10x10 feet)
So that's why the ships in star wars all ways fall
well technically it wouldn't fall either it would just kind of sit there like everything else.
Technically, no it wouldn't. It would move towards whatever has the biggest gravitational "pull".
The funny thing is, the helium balloons move up, not because they are lighter than air, but because a pressure of air at the bottom of the balloon is slightly higher than pressure of air at the top of the balloon. This is true, even if fluid is fully in-compressible, as in-compressible fluids in gravitational field (constant or slowly changing) still do have pressure gradient.
How to prove to a flat earther that gravity exists and that gravity isn't buoyancy
It also wouldn't float well in the jovoan atmospheres, till it got below a certain height.
This man outsmart the intelligent astronauts within minutes 😂
I thought the vacuum will just pop the balloon
Looks like gravity is stronger than the " air " around the balloon.
Since the chamber isn’t a “true” vacuum, then yes, this is an accurate way to describe the system; the buoyant forces are not sufficient to overcome the gravitational attraction in this environment.
I knew it that the balloons would pop lol
I feel like these experiments sound so much better in my head before I give my dad reasons as to why I need a vacuum chamber…
but,alas, he’s not impressed…
Helium farts...
Well helium balloon won't float on the moon, you can still have an oxygen helium mix and have the astronaut sound really funny
Science!
Pls put spaces between the dash. When I first read the title I thought there is a Astronaut-Helium
Before you cut off the vacuum. Imma guess that the balloon is going to pop.
That balloon is so dramatic
Okay but why can I not find a demonstration of a balloon releasing its pressurized air in a vacuum anywhere on the internet
They won't fall in space unless they're subject to gravity.
Helium falls in space because it needs to breath
Not only do they require air but they also require gravity.
In moons case there are more particles in it atmosphere than in a fully vacuumed chamber
Video caption is kind of misleading. In space there's nowhere to fall. Falling occurs under gravity.
Yeah, that's how all things work: not the mythical gravity.
But if it was in space, which direction would it fall in???? Questions to be answered
Sad astronaut noises.
Astronauts hate him and his one sneaky trick
Well than just fill it with air so that way it's always the same density...
If you turn upside down, it should start to go up
Technically nothing falls in space
Do they always get all staticy after being in there? That's really weird
The balloon doesn't even need to be filled with helium to see the effects of this, the less dense an object is the more air it will displace meaning that if you truly have a kilogram (in mass) of steel and a kilogram of feathers the steel will ACTUALLY be a measurable amount heavier than the feathers due to the displaced air creating more buoyant force on the feathers
rip that other balloon
So basically if you send a hellium balloon in the space it will stay between the Earth and the space...
Just have your birthday party upside down so they go the right way
What if astronauts breathed in helium?
The real question is, if inhaled in space, would it still give you a high pitched voice?
So gravity is still a constant even in a vacuum chamber
Finnally i got the answer why balloon pop after reaching the certain height
That's where you're wrong: Outer space doesn't have enough gravity for it to fall!
I would assume it stays just above the atmosphere where the air becomes thin enough for it to stop rising.
So does that also mean that we won't run out of helium?
now i know why helium makes space trash fall on earth