Science, asked by pinkpanda1002, 1 day ago

Why don't you get a fatal jolt of thousands of joules when you rub your hair with a balloon?

Answers

Answered by mr9763578
1

Answer:

When you rub a balloon on your head, electrons move from the atoms and molecules in your hair onto the balloon. Electrons have a negative charge, so the balloon becomes negatively charged, and your hair is left with a positive charge.

Explanation:

hope it help you

Answered by ak07696163gmailcom
0

Explanation:

The Bear Adventure, Super Science has us experimenting with static electricity.

Static electricity is one of those phenomenons that is just fun to play with. From making a balloon stick to the wall all by itself, shuffling your feet on the carpet to shock your brother or sister when you touch their arm, or rubbing a balloon on your hair and slowly pulling it away to watch all the hairs on your head stand up.

I use to have a pair of flip flops that when worn at the grocery store I frequented, would create a ton of static electricity when a walked through the isles (I kind of shuffle when I walk…), And every time I went to place my hands back onto the handle of the shopping cart, a jolt of static electricity would snap.

One experiment that is fun to do is sorting salt and pepper with static electricity.

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