Dictionary Definition
balloon
Noun
1 small thin inflatable rubber bag with narrow
neck
2 large tough non-rigid bag filled with gas or
heated air
Verb
1 ride in a hot-air balloon; "He tried to balloon
around the earth but storms forced him to land in China"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From ballon.Pronunciation
- /bəˈluːn/
- Rhymes with: -uːn
Noun
- An inflatable buoyant object, often (but not necessarily) round and flexible.
- Such an object as a child’s toy.
- Such an object designed to transport people through the air.
- A sac inserted into part of the body for therapeutic reasons; such as angioplasty.
- A speech bubble.
Synonyms
- sense inflatable object
- toy balloon
- sense transport hot-air balloon, montgolfier
- sense in medicine
- sense speech bubble speech bubble, fumetto
Derived terms
- barrage balloon
- balloon animal
- balloon-back
- balloon barrage
- balloon clock
- balloon flower
- ballooning
- balloonist
- balloon sail
- balloon tyre
- balloon vine
- hot-air balloon
- pilot baloon
- weather balloon
- when the balloon goes up
Translations
inflatable object
child’s toy
- Albanian: balonë
- Arabic: (balūn) ,
- trreq Armenian
- Catalan: globus , baló
- Chinese: 气球 (qìqiú)
- Czech: balón
- Dutch: ballon
- trreq Esperanto
- Finnish: ilmapallo
- French: ballon , ballon en baudruche
- Georgian: ჰაერბურთი (haerburt‘i)
- German: Ballon
- Hebrew: בָּלוֹן (balon)
- trreq Hindi
- Hungarian: léggömb, lufi
- trreq Icelandic
- Italian: palloncino
- Japanese: 風船 (ふうせん, fūsen)
- Korean: 기구 (gigu)
- trreq Latvian
- trreq Lithuanian
- Marathi: फुगा (phugā)
- Mongolian: агаарын бөмбөлөг (agaarÿn bömbölög)
- trreq Persian
- trreq Romanian
- Russian: воздушный шар (vozdúšnyj šar)
- Spanish: globo , bomba , chimbomba italbrac Nicaragua
- trreq Swahili
- Swedish: ballong
- Tagalog: lobo
- Thai: (kohm loi)
- Turkish: balon
- trreq Vietnamese
- Yiddish: באַלאָן (balon)
inflatable object to transport people through
the air
- Albanian: balonë, aerostat
- Czech: balón
- Dutch: luchtballon
- Finnish: kuumailmapallo, ilmapallo
- French: montgolfière
- Georgian: აეროსტატი (aerostati)
- German: Heißluftballon
- Hebrew: כדור פורח (kadur pore'akh)
- Hungarian: hőlégballon
- Japanese: 気球 (ききゅう, kikyū)
- Russian: аэростат (aerostát)
- Swedish: luftballong
sac inserted into part of the body
speech bubble See speech
bubble
Verb
Translations
See also
Extensive Definition
- This article is about balloons in general. See also Balloon (aircraft) and Toy balloon.
A balloon is a flexible bag filled with a type of
gas, such as helium, hydrogen, nitrous
oxide or air.
Early balloons were made of dried animal bladders.
Modern balloons can be made from materials such as rubber, latex, polychloroprene or a nylon fabric. Some balloons are
purely decorative, while others are used for specific purposes such
as meteorology,
medical
treatment, military
defense, or transportation.
A balloon's properties, including its low density and relatively
low cost, have led to a wide range of applications.
History
The first balloon was invented by Brazilian-born Portuguese priest, Bartolomeu de Gusmão, and the first public exhibition was to the Portuguese Court on August 8, 1709, in the hall of the Casa da India in Lisbon. The rubber balloon was invented by Michael Faraday in 1824; it was inflated with hydrogen and used in his experiments with that element.. The more familiar latex balloons of today were first manufactured in London, 1847, by J.G. Ingram, but mass production did not occur until the 1930s.Applications
Decoration or entertainment
Party balloons are mostly made of natural latex tapped from rubber trees and can be filled with air, helium, water, or any other suitable liquid or gas. The rubber's elasticity makes the volume adjustable. Most of this rubber is made from recycled material, such as old tires and tennis shoes.Filling the balloon with air is done with the
mouth, with a manual or electric inflater (such as a hand pump), or with a source of
compressed gas.
When rubber balloons are filled with helium so
that they float, they typically retain their buoyancy for only a
day or so. The enclosed helium atoms escape through small pores in
the latex which are larger than the helium atoms. Balloons filled
with air usually hold their size and shape much longer.
Even a perfect rubber balloon eventually loses
the gas to the outside. The process by which a substance or solute
migrates from a region of high concentration, through a barrier or
membrane, to a region of lower concentration is called diffusion. The inside of
balloons can be treated with a special gel (for instance, the
polymer solution sold under the "Hi Float" brand) which coats the
inside of the balloon to reduce the helium leakage, thus increasing
float time to a week or longer.
Beginning in the late 1970s, some more expensive
(and longer-lasting) foil balloons have been made of thin,
unstretchable, less permeable
metalized plastic films. These balloons have attractive shiny
reflective surfaces and are often printed with color pictures and
patterns for gifts and parties. The most important attribute of
metalized nylon for balloons is its light weight, increasing
buoyancy and its ability to keep the helium gas from escaping for
several weeks. However, there has been some environmental concern,
since the metalized nylon does not biodegrade
or shred as a rubber balloon does, and a helium balloon released
into the atmosphere can travel a long way before finally bursting
or deflating. Release of these types of balloons into the
atmosphere is considered harmful to the environment. This type of
balloon can also conduct electricity on its surface and released
foil balloons can become entangled in power lines and cause power
outages.
Released balloons can land almost anywhere,
including on nature preserves or other areas where they pose a
serious hazard to animals through ingestion or entanglement. Latex
balloons are especially dangerous to sea creatures because latex
retains its elasticity for 12 months or more when exposed to sea
water rather than air. Because of the harm to wildlife and the
effect of litter on the environment, some jurisdictions even
legislate to control mass balloon releases. Legislation proposed in
Maryland,
USA was named after Inky, a pygmy sperm whale
who needed 6 operations after swallowing debris, the largest piece
of which was a mylar balloon.
Professional balloon party decorators use
electronic equipment to enable the exact amount of helium to fill
the balloon. For non-floating balloons air inflators are used.
Professional quality balloons are used, which differ from most
retail packet balloons by being larger in size and made from 100%
biodegradable latex.
Balloon modeling and balloons in art
Balloon artists are entertainers who twist and tie inflated tubular balloons into sculptures (see balloon animal). The balloons used for balloon 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 hundreds of 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 tables decorations for celebratory events. Table
decorations normally appear with 3 or 5 balloons on each bouquet.
Ribbon is curled and added with a weight to keep the balloons from
floating away.Model
of the Balloons
Water balloons
Water balloons are thin, small rubber balloons 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 or practical joke. They can be used in competitions or games. They are smaller than regular balloons.Balloon rockets
Balloons are often deliberately released, creating so called balloon rocket or rocket balloon. Rocket balloons work because the elastic balloons contract on the air within them, and so when the mouth of the balloon is left open, the gas within the balloon shoots out, and, due to Newton's third law of motion, the balloon is propelled forward. This is fundamentally the same way that a rocket works.Flying machines
Large balloons filled with hot air or buoyant gas have been used as flying machines since the 18th century. The earliest flights were made with hot air balloons using air heated with a flame, or hydrogen; later, helium was used.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.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.
See also
Notes
External links
- Stratospheric balloons, history and present Historical recopilation project on the use of stratospheric balloons in the scientific research, the military field and the aerospace activity
- National trade association for the UK balloon industry
- National trade association for the Australasian balloon industry
- Royal Engineers Museum Royal Engineers and Aeronautics
- Royal Engineers Museum Early British Military Ballooning (1863)
balloon in Arabic: بالون
balloon in Welsh: Balŵn
balloon in Danish: Ballon
balloon in German: Ballon
balloon in Spanish: Globo (juguete)
balloon in Persian: بادکنک
balloon in Croatian: Balon
balloon in Hebrew: בלון
balloon in Hungarian: Hőlégballon
balloon in Dutch: Ballon
balloon in Japanese: 風船
balloon in Norwegian Nynorsk: Ballong
balloon in Polish: Balon
balloon in Russian: Воздушный шарик
balloon in Swedish: Ballong
balloon in Vietnamese: Khí cầu
balloon in Turkish: Balon (dekoratif)
balloon in Chinese: 气球
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Graf Zeppelin, accrue, accumulate, advance, aeroplane, aerostat, air bubble, airlift, airplane, airship, appreciate, bag, ball, ballonet, be airborne, bead, belly, belly out, bilge, billow, bladder, bleb, blimp, blister, bloat, blob, blood blister, boll, bolus, boom, bouge, breed, broaden, bubble, bug, bulb, bulbil, bulblet, bulge, bulk, bulla, captive balloon, conglobulate, crescendo, cruise, develop, dilate, dirigible, dirigible balloon,
distend, drift, ellipsoid, enlarge, expand, extend, ferry, fever blister, fill out,
flit, fly, fob, gain, gain strength, gasbag, geoid, get ahead, glide, globe, globelet, globoid, globule, glomerulus, go up, gob, gobbet, goggle, greaten, grow, hop, hover, hydroplane, increase, intensify, jet, knob, knot, lighter-than-air craft,
mount, multiply, mushroom, navigate, oblate spheroid,
orb, orbit, orblet, pellet, pilot balloon, pocket, poke, pooch, pop, pouch, pout, prolate spheroid, proliferate, puff up, rigid
airship, rise, rondure, round out, run up,
sac, sack, sail, sailplane, sausage, seaplane, semirigid airship,
ship, shoot up, snowball, soap bubble, soar, sphere, spherify, spheroid, spherule, spread, strengthen, stretch, swell, swell out, take the air,
take wing, tumefy,
vesicle, volplane, wax, weather balloon, widen, wing, zeppelin