Travel0 min ago
Intestinal gas
I dont mean to cause any offence with this question - its just a light hearted one...
Do you weigh more or less after breaking wind?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Snook / woofgang, you both need more sleep, and stop bunking off those science lessons.
The answer in more detail:
Hypothetically, if your body continued to fill with hydrogen and methane (The two main constituents of intestinal gas) without any way of release (i.e without breaking wind) your body would start to weigh less and less (these gases are lighter than air, and are therefore used in balloons to lift people into the air).
Gravity ring any bells?
Likewise, when these gasses are released, you would weigh more, just as if you stepped on a set of scales and weighed yourself while holding a balloon filled with hydrogen you would weigh less than you would when you released it. Phew, hope thats clear at last.
Just a point to bear in mind for the future Snook / Woofgang, iIf you really don't know the answer, don't you think it would be better not to create confusion by contradicting the people that do?
Human beings can't exisit in a vacuum woofgang, I think the question you are trying to ask is, what effect would it have in space? I.e In a spacesuit, in a weightless environment? Other than the obvious - none either way.
However, if you want to test the effect in a vacuum, taking the helmet off would would be an entertaining experiment, as you would (fatally) 'break wind' from every cavity in your body.