Ballon 010
Ballon 010
Ballon 010
and air. For special tasks, balloons can be filled with smoke, liquid water, granular media (e.g. sand, flour or rice),
or light sources. Modern day balloons are made from materials such as rubber, latex, polychloroprene, or
a nylon fabric, and can come in many different colors. Some early balloons were made of dried animal bladders,
such as the pig bladder. Some balloons are used for decorative purposes or entertaining purposes, while others
are used for practical purposes such as meteorology, medical treatment, military defense, or transportation. A
balloon's properties, including its low density and low cost, have led to a wide range of applications.
The rubber balloon was invented by Michael Faraday in 1824, during experiments with various gases. He
invented them for use in the lab.[1]
Applications
See also: List of balloon uses
Play
Main article: Toy balloon
Decoration
Party Balloons
Animal-shaped balloons
Beginning in the late 1970s, some more expensive (and longer-lasting) foil balloons made of thin, unstretchable,
less permeable metallised films such as Mylar (BoPET) started being produced. These balloons have attractive
shiny reflective surfaces and are often printed with color pictures and patterns for gifts and parties. The most
important attributes of metallised nylon for balloons are its light weight, increasing buoyancy, and its ability to
keep the helium gas from escaping for several weeks. Foil balloons have been criticized for interfering with power
lines.[4][5]
Sculpture
Balloon artists are entertainers who twist and tie inflated tubular balloons into sculptures such as animals
(see balloon modelling). The balloons used for sculpture are made of extra-stretchy rubber so that they can be
twisted and tied without bursting. Since the pressure required to inflate a balloon is inversely proportional to the
diameter of the balloon, these tiny tubular balloons are extremely hard to inflate initially. A pump is usually used
to inflate these balloons.
Decorators may use helium balloons to create balloon sculptures. Usually the round shape of the balloon restricts
these to simple arches or walls, but on occasion more ambitious "sculptures" have been attempted. It is also
common to use balloons as table decorations for celebratory events. Balloons can sometimes be modeled to
form shapes of animals. Table decorations normally appear with three or five balloons on each bouquet. Ribbon
is curled and added with a weight to keep the balloons from floating away.
Publicity
Balloons are used for publicity at major events. Screen printing processes can be used to print designs and
company logos onto the balloons. Custom built printers inflate the balloon and apply ink with elastic qualities
through a silk screen template. In January 2008, the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York organized
a display of 4,200 red balloons outside the United Nations Headquarters.[6]
Also in the 1950s at the start of the Cold War, activists in Western Europe uses balloons for propaganda
purposes that would float east over Eastern Europe, which would release newspapers and pamphlets. [7] In 2014,
South Korean activists used the same balloon method to get information to those in North Korea. [8]
Paolo Scannavino set the record of 11 for the most giant balloons entered in 2 minutes. [9]
Water projection
Main article: Water balloon
Water balloons are thin, small rubber balloons filled with a liquid, usually water, instead of a gas, and intended to
be easily broken. They are usually used by children, who throw them at each other, trying to get each other wet,
as a game, competition, or practical joke. By forcing water out the open end of a water balloon, it is possible to
use it as a makeshift water gun.
Solar lift
Main article: Solar balloon
Solar balloons are thin, large balloons filled with air that is heated by the sun in order to decrease its density to
obtain lift.
Rockets
Main article: Balloon rocket
Balloons are often deliberately released, creating a so-called balloon rocket. Balloon rockets work because the
elastic balloons contract on the air within them, and so when the mouth of the balloon is opened, the gas within
the balloon is expelled out, and due to Newton's third law of motion, the balloon is propelled forward. This is the
same way that a rocket works.[10]
Flying machines
Medicine
Angioplasty is a surgical procedure in which very small balloons are inserted into blocked or partially
blocked blood vessels near the heart. Once in place, the balloon is inflated to clear or compress arterial plaque,
and to stretch the walls of the vessel, thus preventing myocardial infarction. A small stent can be inserted at the
angioplasty site to keep the vessel open after the balloon's removal.[11]
Balloon catheters are catheters that have balloons at their tip to keep them from slipping out. For example, the
balloon of a Foley catheter is inflated when the catheter is inserted into the urinary bladder and secures its
position.[12]
Insertion of balloons subsequently filled with air or liquid can be used to stop bleeding in hollow internal organs
such as stomach or uterus.
History
Humans have intentionally filled bladders, especially actual animal bladders, with air since prehistory. In Ancient
Greece, these had a number of recorded uses. The Aztecs inflated cat intestines to make shapes to present as
sacrifices to the gods.[13] By the 18th century, people were inflating balloons of cloth or canvas with hot air and
sending it aloft, the Montgolfier brothers going so far as to experiment with first animals in 1782, and then, when
altitude did not kill them, human beings in 1783.
The first hydrogen-filled gas balloon was flown in the 1790s. A century later the first hydrogen-filled weather
balloons were launched in France.
The first modern rubber balloons on record were made by Michael Faraday in 1824. He used these to contain
gasses he was experimenting with, especially hydrogen. By 1825 similar balloons were being sold by Thomas
Hancock, but like Faraday's they came disassembled, as two circles of soft rubber. The user was expected to lay
the circles one on top of the other and rub their edges until the soft, gummy rubber stuck, leaving the powdered
inner part loose for inflation.[14] Modern, preassembled balloons were being sold in the US by the early 20th
century.
Makeup