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Ascension éxecutée par Charles dans La Prairie de Nesles, le 1 Decémbre 1783 from Histoire des ballons et des aéronautes célèbres.

Smithsonian Libraries and Archives

Object Details

Creator
Tissandier, Gaston
Book Title
Histoire des ballons et des aéronautes célèbres.
Caption
Ascension éxecutée par Charles dans La Prairie de Nesles, le 1 Decémbre 1783.
Educational Notes
Hot air is lighter than cold air, so it rises. This discovery gave birth to hot air ballooning in France in the late 18th century. Early balloonists discovered that if you capture hot air in a balloon, the balloon rises, along with anything attached, such as a basket. They found that hydrogen-filled balloons rose in the sky just as party balloons today filled with helium rise to the ceiling. Because hydrogen is significantly lighter than air, balloons filled with hydrogen can rise extremely high in the sky. This illustration is a depiction of the first manned hydrogen balloon taking off on December 1, 1783. It flew over 20 miles at an altitude of 9,800 feet. That’s as high as eight Empire State Buildings!
1887-1890
Publication Date
1887-1890
Image ID
SIL-histoiredesballo01tiss_0099
Catalog ID
93068
Rights
No Copyright - United States
Type
Prints
Place
Nesles (France)
Publication Place
Paris
Publisher
 H. Launette et cie
See more items in
See Wonder
Smithsonian Libraries
Topic
Transportation
Hot Air Balloons
France
Aeronautics
Language
French
Record ID
silgoi_68419
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0

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