Friday, August 2, 2019
Eighteenth Century Ballooning :: European Europe History
Eighteenth Century Ballooning à à In a time where the skies are full of aircraft, it is hard to à imagine a time when air travel was nothing but a dream. That was à just the case during the early eighteenth century. The dream of flight à was so concentrated on winged flight that ballooning was actually and à accidental discovery. The shift to alternate opportunities to fly à occurred in 1766 with the discovery of hydrogen. Henry Cavendish à discovered the gas he coined the ââ¬Å"inflammable gas.â⬠At that time this à meant that the gas was highly combustible, unlike todayââ¬â¢s à interpretation of inflammable. What made this gas so important was à the fact that the gas was much lighter than the atmosphere. The à lighter gas would give the balloon lift in the surrounding atmosphere, à hopefully taking a human along with it. The new discovery brought a à lot of excitement to the pursuit of air travel. The discovery began to à move forward in 1774 with Joseph Priestlyââ¬â¢s publication of à ââ¬Å"Experiments and Observations with Different Types of Air.â⬠This à paper explored uses of the gas and further explained its properties for à future experimentation. In 1777, the paper was translated into à French and read by Joseph Montgolfier. The paper inspired à Montgolfier to further explore the possibilities of the gas. Montgolfier à and his brother Etienne began experimenting with the gas in hopes of à coming up with a device to give them flight. This became a reality in à 1786 when the two brothers were able to fly small cloth and paper hot à air filled balloons. This was the small and modest beginning to hot air à balloon flight. à The brothers had some complication to work out with the first à flights being experimental. They used dense smoke from burning à chopped wool or damp straw to lift the balloon. The smoke idea most à likely came from a concept left over from the medieval times. They à believed that smoke had more of a virtue of lightness, and lighter à meant that the balloon had a better chance of flight. Another à possibility is that the brothers believed that the dense smoke would à simply be better contained in the balloon. Some individuals even à believe that the brothers used thick smoke to conceal their ideas.
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