Very interesting, but I don’t see how replacing the same volume of air in our lungs with helium doesn’t make you lighter. It’s the same volume, so the volume displacement zeroes out in any equation - I think that poster may mean as compared to empty lungs. Even then I think they’re mistaken - otherwise a blimp/balloon wouldn’t work, as it too is displacing air around itself, and increasing in volume.
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/130541/when-you-breath-in-a-helium-balloon-do-you-lose-weight#:~:text=When you breath in helium,but lose density and weight.
Thank you, really interesting!
On a side note, I always through Stack Exchange was just for computery stuff. Didn’t know it covered everything!
They do but the amount of information is way smaller for the others. With your search engine of choice you’ll find the posts though if there are any.
It can be interesting to see the questions that make it to hot questions.
Its a little sample of the various communities.
https://stackexchange.com/questions
And the non-tech ones tend to be a lot less toxic too
Very interesting, but I don’t see how replacing the same volume of air in our lungs with helium doesn’t make you lighter. It’s the same volume, so the volume displacement zeroes out in any equation - I think that poster may mean as compared to empty lungs. Even then I think they’re mistaken - otherwise a blimp/balloon wouldn’t work, as it too is displacing air around itself, and increasing in volume.
Helium by volume is lighter than air. That metric is called density.
So if you displace the volume in your lungs with helium that weighs less than the air that’s usually there, you will weigh less.
Physics!