you sould have learnd that in preschool but.............. the anser to your problem? is yes a ball is a sphere and so is a balloon and a orange and a apple and a grape......and do i have to say any more
It depends on many things, but if you're going by the equatorial radius as the same size, the balloon should be about 10-15% larger. Note that you can mesure the volume of irregular shapes, thanks to my good friend Archemedes ("Eurika!"). Take a mesuring container large enough to easily hold the balloon and fill it about 2/3 full. Note the volume the water occupies by the water level. Now, immerse the balloon in the water and mesure the volume by the water level again. the difference is the volume of the balloon.
The radius of a sphere is equal distance from the center of the sphere to all points within the sphere.
Sphere is one syllable: sphere.
there are parts of a sphere!!
It will fill the balloon and make a oval sphere.
A electric sphere.
you sould have learnd that in preschool but.............. the anser to your problem? is yes a ball is a sphere and so is a balloon and a orange and a apple and a grape......and do i have to say any more
It depends on the size of the balloon. As the diameter of the balloon increases, its volume is cubed, therefore the volume quickly increases with the size of the balloon.
A sphere with 3-ft diameter has about 0.4 cubic metre of volume.
A balloon can be blown up until the pressure of the contained air becomes too great, and the rubber breaks. I can imagine that the volume of air a balloon can hold depends on the size of the balloon before it is inflated, the thickness of the rubber, and the quality of the rubber.Various types of balloons will therefore have different capacities. I would think that an average party balloon could probably hold 3 or 4 litres of air. If you wanted, you could find the radius of the balloon, then calculate the volume (presuming that the balloon is a sphere). You could also fill a balloon with water then weigh it.
The smallest surface area for a given volume is a sphere. A spherical object such as a balloon represents the minimum energy required to maintain the volume of the material within. A balloon filled with water if stretched will increase the surface area of the balloon without altering the volume as water is non-compressible. Any alternative shape that encloses the same volume will have a larger surface area than a sphere. A perfect example is a drop of liquid in a zero gravity environment which will vibrate when intially created but will gradually slow to a stop and take the form of a perfect sphere.
If the surface area of a sphere has increased by 11%, its radius has increased by 5.36% .(rounded)
Use the formula for a sphere. First divide the diameter by 2; that will give you the radius.
The list of colours that end with sphere (the same with geometric shapes, animal shapes, plant shapes, balloons, etc.) are: Red sphere Black sphere Blue sphere Yellow sphere Pink sphere Silver sphere Green sphere Purple sphere Orange sphere Crimson sphere Navy sphere White sphere Gold sphere Teal sphere Brown sphere Indigo sphere Saffron sphere Amethyst sphere Vermilion sphere Chartreuse sphere Magenta sphere Viridian sphere Burgundy sphere Powder blue sphere Scarlet sphere Cyan sphere Azure sphere Lavender sphere Gray sphere Beige sphere Cerulean sphere Slate sphere Cobalt sphere Gunmetal sphere Copper sphere Bronze sphere Khaki sphere Citrine sphere Maroon sphere Olive sphere Peach sphere Cream sphere Sangria sphere Plum sphere Emerald sphere Cerise sphere Mauve sphere Moccasin sphere Aquamarine sphere Pearl sphere Turquoise sphere Platinum sphere Tan sphere Bittersweet sphere Periwinkle sphere Sapphire sphere Fuchsia sphere Dark green sphere Mahogany sphere Sea green sphere Claret sphere Lime sphere Amber sphere Ecru sphere Taupe sphere Tawny sphere Lilac sphere Ochre sphere Sepia sphere Celadon sphere Rust sphere Orchid sphere Ash gray sphere Steel blue sphere Sky blue sphere Burnt orange sphere Brick red sphere Caramel sphere Marigold sphere Burnt sienna sphere Verdigris sphere Indochine sphere Carmine sphere Linen sphere Goldenrod sphere Butterscotch sphere Dark gray sphere Harlequin green sphere Amaranth sphere Ultramarine sphere Royal blue sphere Garnet sphere Ebony sphere Ivory sphere Thistle sphere Jade green sphere Auburn sphere Sienna sphere Umber sphere Cadet blue sphere Dark brown sphere Orange peel sphere Salmon sphere Wisteria sphere Persimmon sphere Apricot sphere Brass sphere Ruby sphere Mint sphere Forest green sphere Aubergine sphere Hazel sphere Topaz sphere Bisque sphere Spring green sphere Rainbow sphere
Depending on what size you want, you can get a balloon, and blow it to appropriate size, then cover it with paper mashay, and when it dries, pop the balloon, and paint the sphere to look like earth. Another option is go to Michael's craft store and just buy a Styrofoam ball, and paint it.
Since a sphere is round it is a shape without a face.