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helium balloons, wh...
 

[Closed] helium balloons, what happens to them...

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[#7183758]

...when poor jonny lets go of the string and watches, crying, as his balloon sails off into the sunset. does it go up until it reaches a point where the air density is equal that of the helium inside, or does it eventually pop as the helium expands? is there a layer up there with 1000's of them all floating about? answers below please, thanks


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:09 am
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The helium leaks out.... they fall to land/sea where they're ingested by marine life & sometimes farm animals. Its not usually a good result for the animal.

alternatively, they get collected by mad canadians who see a way to avoid helicopter fees ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:11 am
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They all seem to end up in the hedgerows of Mid-Wales from my experience. Seems to be the acceptable face of littering and a waste of an essential resource that we can't make more of.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:12 am
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As above. Although if one managed to rise far enough by avoiding downdraughts and the like it'd probably burst when the pressure got low enough. With the same end result.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:13 am
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It's the helium ballon thief elf in the sky.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:28 am
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They are melted by Chinese Lanterns


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:30 am
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they get collected by mad canadians who see a way to avoid helicopter fees

don't get it. ๐Ÿ˜


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:35 am
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don't get it.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-33414264


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:37 am
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The helium molecules pass through the molecular matrix of the envelope and they slowly lose volume and buoyancy. Similar to the air in latex inner tubes.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:49 am
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Aliens use them for sexy parties.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:51 am
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As above, they gradually leak and fall to earth.

However, did you know the helium carries on rising until escapes into space?

Helium is a finite resource and we will eventually run out.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 11:03 am
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Remember the hole in the ozone layer? It was filled by helium baloons which is why it's no longer in the news.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 11:49 am
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How many baloons worth of helium have we got left to play with ?


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 12:40 pm
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Something like 60 years supply in total, proven, IIRC? But helium balloons are a small proportion of usage and there's some much larger sources of wastage. Apparently the main problem's more or less an economic distortion, the USA has huge helium reserves which it's been selling off, suppressing price and making it cheap enough to waste, or to use where other substances could be used. Seems likely usage will fall if it rises to a natural market value

In the longer term we'll just cloudscoop it out of the gas giants, and switch to explosive hydrogen balloons, which will be awesome.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 12:48 pm
 anjs
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On and then we lose all super cooled magnets, bye bye MRI scans for example


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 12:51 pm
 Drac
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As of 2011 the world's helium reserves were estimated at 40 billion cubic meters

I reckon we'll get to the end of the month.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 12:58 pm
 DezB
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How come they didn't arrest Carl Fredricksen?


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 1:12 pm
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To expand on Northwind's comment - [url= http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/why-the-world-is-running-out-of-helium-2059357.html ]USA selling all Helium reserves by 2015[/url].


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 1:23 pm
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Given that helium is lighter than air why does it not all float away any way?

Is it stuck underground?


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 1:26 pm
 DezB
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[i]
Given that helium is lighter than air why does it not all float away any way?[/i]

Obvious innit

[img] ?set_id=880000500F[/img]


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 1:32 pm
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Given that helium is lighter than air why does it not all float away any way?

It does, once it gets into the air.

Is it stuck underground?

Currently yes. I think it is there because of radiactive decay. Things like uranium (created in supernovae of the first generation of stars in the universe) decay into various other elements and isotopes, producing some helium on the way. This hangs around in the rock itself, until eventuall it seeps into.. I dunno.. some place it can be extracted?

*off to google*


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 1:33 pm
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It's normally distilled from natural gas. (it's basically the same process as the oil fractional distillation you probably did in school) So I suppose fracking could unlock more, good old fracking.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 2:29 pm
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It takes days for helium to leak out of a balloon. They will rise and expand as the air pressure decreases until they eventually burst and fall into a hedgerow in Wales.

You could test it by strapping your go pro to one and letting it go.


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 7:35 pm
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Hardly ever seen a helium balloon in the hedgerows..........plenty of McDonalds bags and Red Bull cans however ........grrrr


 
Posted : 09/07/2015 10:00 pm