• We have updated the guidelines regarding posting political content: please see the stickied thread on Website Issues.

'Balloon Boy' (2009; Colorado: Runaway Balloon; Hoax?)

rynner2

Gone But Not Forgotten
(ACCOUNT RETIRED)
Joined
Aug 7, 2001
Messages
54,631
US runaway balloon lands in field

A helium balloon which was floating over the US state of Colorado with a six-year-old boy reportedly inside has landed, in a drama broadcast on TV.

US media reports say the boy was not found on board. Police are now said to be searching for him on the ground.

The mushroom-shaped silver balloon, apparently made by the boy's father, reportedly reached heights of 7,000ft.

The balloon was floating about 40 miles north of Denver before it came down, surrounded by rescue vehicles.

Earlier, Larimer County sheriff's office spokeswoman Cathy Davis told reporters the balloon was owned by the boy's parents and had been tethered in the back garden of their home.

She said their two sons were playing outside when the older boy saw the younger one climb in and the balloon fly away.

Media reports said the boy had been named by local police as Falcon Heene. His father, Richard Heene, apparently used the balloon to track the weather.

The police are said to be searching on the ground, including the neighbourhood where the family lives.

Live footage of the balloon, which was being tracked by media helicopters, showed it soaring high above the ground.

The child was believed to have climbed in through an access door.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8309818.stm
 
All sounds fishy to me. Where is he now - did he fall out? Is he dead? Did he really get in and fly away in the first place? :?
 
Hahaha, I was right - he's apparently been found at home. Never was in the balloon in the first place. :lol:
 
escargot1 said:
Hahaha, I was right - he's apparently been found at home. Never was in the balloon in the first place. :lol:
Having seen footage of the balloon, the thought of a six year old climbing inside did seem unlikely. Too flimsy.

More likely the kid managed to release the balloon, whilst playing, took fright and then hid himself from his parents, in case he got into trouble.


:lol:
 
escargot1 said:
Hahaha, I was right - he's apparently been found at home. Never was in the balloon in the first place. :lol:

Okay, so now I won't feel like a bad person for pointing out the potential irony of the boy's name.
 
Flyaway 'balloon boy' found in attic

A six-year-old boy has been found hiding in a cardboard box in his family's garage attic, after fears he was aboard a homemade helium balloon that hurtled 80km through the sky on live television.

The discovery marked a bizarre end to a saga that started when the giant silvery balloon floated away from the family's yard, sparking a frantic rescue operation that involved military helicopters and briefly shut down Denver International Airport.

But Sheriff Jim Alderden turned to reporters during a news conference and gave a thumbs up and said six-year-old Falcon Heene is "at the house."

"Apparently he's been there the whole time," he said.

The boy's father, Richard Heene, said the family was tinkering with the balloon on Thursday (Friday NZ time) and that he scolded Falcon for getting inside a compartment on the craft.

He said Falcon's brother had seen him inside the compartment before it took off and that's why they thought he was in there when it launched.

But the boy fled to the attic at some point after the scolding and was never in the balloon during its two-hour, 80km journey through two counties. "I yelled at him. I'm really sorry I yelled at him," Heene said as he hugged his son during a news conference.

"I was in the attic and he scared me because he yelled at me," Falcon said. "That's why I went in the attic."

Richard Heene adamantly denied the notion that the whole thing was a big publicity stunt. "That's horrible after the crap we just went through. No."

The flying saucer-like craft tipped precariously at times before gliding to the ground in a field. With the child nowhere in sight, investigators searched the balloon's path. Several people reported seeing something fall from the craft while it was in the air, and yellow crime-scene tape was placed around the home.

Click here to watch the video.

But in the end, the boy apparently was in the garage the whole time, even as investigators scoured the house and neighbourhood for any sign of him.

Neighbour Bob Licko, 65, said he was leaving home when he heard commotion in the backyard of the family. He said he saw two boys on the roof with a camera, commenting about their brother.

"One of the boys yelled to me that his brother was way up in the air," Licko said.

Licko said the boy's mother seemed distraught and that the boy's father was running around the house. The Poudre School District in Fort Collins, where the boys attend, did not have classes for elementary schools on Thursday because of a teacher work day.

STORM CHASERS

The boys parents are storm chasers who appeared twice in the US reality show Wife Swap, most recently in March.

"When the Heene family aren't chasing storms, they devote their time to scientific experiments that include looking for extraterrestrials and building a research-gathering flying saucer to send into the eye of the storm," according to the show.

Click here to watch Falcon rapping with his brothers.

In a 2007 interview with The Denver Post, Richard Heene described becoming a storm chaser after a tornado ripped off a roof where he was working as a contractor and said he once flew a plane around Hurricane Wilma's perimeter in 2005.

Pursuing bad weather was a family activity with the children coming along as the father sought evidence to prove his theory that rotating storms create their own magnetic fields.

Although Richard said he has no specialised training, they had a computer tracking system in their car and a special motorcycle.

While the balloon was airborne, Colorado Army National Guard sent a UH-58 Kiowa helicopter and was preparing to send a Black Hawk UH-60 to try to rescue the boy, possibly by lowering someone to the balloon. They also were working with pilots of ultralight aircraft on the possibility of putting weights on the homemade craft to weigh it down.

Col Chris Petty, one of the pilots aboard the Black Hawk, said he was thrilled the boy was OK.

Asked what he would say to the six-year-old if he saw him, Petty said: "I'm really glad you're alive, I'm very thankful, but I'd sure like to know the rest of the story."

AIRPORT CLOSED

The episode led to a brief shutdown of northbound departures from one of the nation's busiest airports, said a controller at the Federal Aviation Administration's radar centre in Longmont, Colo.

FAA canceled all northbound takeoffs between 1pm and 1.15pm local time, said Lyle Burrington, the National Air Traffic Controllers Association representative at the centre. The balloon was about 19km northwest of the airport at that time.

Before the departure shutdown, controllers had been vectoring planes taking off in that direction away from the balloon, Burrington said.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Laura Brown said the agency tracked the balloon through reports from pilots.

Neighbour Lisa Eklund described seeing the balloon pass.

"We were sitting eating, out looking where they normally shoot off hot air balloons. My husband said he saw something. It went over our rooftop. Then we saw the big round balloonish thing, it was spinning," she said.

"By the time I saw it, it travelled pretty fast," she said.

The balloon landed on its own in a dirt field. Sheriff's deputies secured it to keep it in place, even tossing shovelfuls of dirt on one edge.

Jason Humbert saw the balloon land. He said he had a call from his mother in Texas who told him about the balloon. He was in a field checking on an oil well when he found himself surrounded by police who had been chasing the balloon.

"It looked like an alien spaceship you see in those old, old movies. You know, those black-and-white ones. It came down softly. I asked a police officer if the boy was OK and he said there was no one in it," Humbert said.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/world/americas/2970169/Flyaway-balloon-boy-found-alive-reports
 
There's teelings of him appearing in "Wife-Swap", *The father, not the son* and it was a bit of a stunt, opportune wise. Looking at the balloon, doesn't it quash ALL of the Mexican "OVNI" videos? Don't get me started on the flying witch (tethered helium ballons) video.
 
Balloon boy father denies TV fake

The father of a boy thought to have been carried away by a helium balloon before being found at home has denied that the incident was a media stunt.

Richard Heene said he was "appalled" at suggestions the disappearance of his son Falcon, six, may have been staged.

Speaking live on CNN, Falcon had said he heard his family searching for him but stayed quiet because his parents "said that we did this for a show". :shock:

Richard Heene and his wife previously appeared on reality TV show Wife Swap.

TV network ABC described them as a "storm-chasing, science-obsessed family".

The balloon drama was also played out on TV, with US networks devoting their airtime to live footage of the balloon over Colorado.

The balloon landed in fields and was surrounded by rescue vehicles after a two-hour flight.

But Larimer County sheriff Jim Alderden then announced that the boy had been found alive and well in a box in the attic of his family's house.

The news delighted both the Heenes and the TV networks, startled by news that the six-year-old was in fact safe and well.

However, questions over the family's motivation later emerged during a CNN interview.

Mr Heene was asked by an interviewer to ask his son why he had not emerged from his hiding place when he heard his parents calling out his name.

Speaking hesitantly at first, Falcon answered: "You had said that we did this for a show."

Pressed on what his son might have meant, Mr Heene struggled for an answer, saying that his son must have been confused by the family's previous appearance on Wife Swap.

In a later segment of the interview Mr Heene avoided a request to ask Falcon once again what he meant by his comment, and instead rounded on his questioner.

"I'm kind of appalled after all the feelings that I went through, up and down, that you guys are trying to suggest something else," he said.

Police official Jim Alderden said his officers had been convinced throughout the day that they had been dealing with a genuine situation.

However, he conceded, the CNN interview "raised some questions".

"We intend to go back and further ask the family to co-operate with our investigation through answering more questions and resolve this issue," he told the Associated Press.

Earlier, the balloon landed in fields and was surrounded by rescue vehicles after a two-hour flight.

Mr Alderden then announced that the boy had been found alive and well in a box in the attic of his family's house.

He said the house had been searched twice, but the search had obviously not been thorough enough. He also said that police had questioned Falcon's brother repeatedly after he said he saw him in the balloon.

"What he said was that he saw his brother climb into that apparatus and he was very adamant, they interviewed him multiple times and that was his consistent story," Mr Alderden said.

"I was in the attic and he scared me because he yelled at me," Falcon said. "That's why I went in the attic."

Asked what he thought when the balloon had landed with no sign of his son, Richard Heene said: "The only thing I could think of was that he had fallen out."

The silver balloon, apparently made by the boy's father, reportedly reached heights of 7,000ft (2km).

It was floating about 40 miles north of Denver before it came down.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8310121.stm
 
From here
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8309818.stm
Larimer county sheriff Jim Alderden told reporters that apparently Falcon Heene had "been there the whole time".

Police had been searching for the boy after his brother said he thought Falcon had taken off with the balloon.

The drama was played out on TV, with US networks devoting their airtime to live footage of the balloon over Colorado.

'He yelled at me'

The balloon landed in fields and was surrounded by rescue vehicles after a two-hour flight.


Falcon Heene said he hid in the attic because he was scared
Police officers searched on the ground in the direction in which the balloon flew, as well as the neighbourhood where the family lives.

But Mr Alderden then announced that the boy had been found alive and well in a box in the attic of his family's house.

He said the house had been searched twice, but the search had obviously not been thorough enough. He also said that police had questioned the brother repeatedly.

"What he said was that he saw his brother climb into that apparatus and he was very adamant, they interviewed him multiple times and that was his consistent story," Mr Alderden said

"I can't tell you how many times this has happened over the course of my career," he added.

Whaat? How many times in his career has a kid apparently climbed into a home made-balloon and been chased across Colorado by rescue vehicles?

I can just imagine him saying- "No, you're wasting your time, the kid's back home hiding in a box in the attic.
Happens every time."
 
Woof woof
What´s that Lassie?
Woof woof woof!
What, you´re saying Falcon crawled into a large silver helium balloon, untethered it and is now floating across Colorado?
Woof!
 
Caught the tail end of a piece about this on channel 4 news tonight. They showed the video of the family being interviewed on some US show where little Falcon (what a name) appears to let it slip that it was all a hoax. Now, the look on his dad's face at that precise moment speaks volumes. He may as well have been making throat cutting motions whilst yelling cut.
Plus, aside from the wife-swap thing, the family have some sort of sideline as storm-chasers so you are rather left with the impression of a family (or at least the parents) desperate for media attention. Even the video of the balloon supposedly slipping it's moorings contans some serious over-acting on the part of dad. It all smacks of publicity stunt.

In my view, the whole thing is a load of hot air.

Now where did I put my coat?
 
Balloon boy: 911 call describes Falcon Heene 'in flying saucer'
Falcon Heene's parents tried to explain how he had floated away on a "flying saucer" in a frantic call to the emergency services.
By Nick Allen in Los Angeles
Published: 11:00PM BST 16 Oct 2009

The boy's hysterical mother, Mayumi Heene, cries as she begs a 911 operator to find someone to "get my son". An operator asks if she means that her son is on an "experimental plane" and Mrs Heene says: "It's a flying saucer".

The operator asks if there is a tracking device but Mrs Heene is too upset to continue and hands the phone to her husband, Richard, who explains that there isn't and his son does not know how to operate the device.

A frantic Mr Heene says: "We had it tethered. It wasn't supposed to take off. We are testing it.

"I don't know if you can track the electricity it produces. Every five minutes it comes on for one minute. It emits one million volts to the outer skin." The operator asks which way the wind is blowing and Mr Heene checks.

He says: "It's going south-east. He's headed straight for the airport. If an aircraft hit this, I mean, you know it's silver foil, it's hard to see." The operator says she is contacting the airport and aviation authority but after a hold period she can't hear Mr Heene anymore.

Falcon Heene was found alive hiding at his parents' home after several hours during which the whole of America believed he was stuck inside an experimental flying saucer-shaped balloon, built by his father, which had floated off.

Television crews in helicopters beamed live pictures of the contraption as it was swept across the skies of Colorado and everyone from the National Guard to NORAD was involved in attempts to rescue the missing boy.

Denver airport was closed and there was even a plan to shoot the balloon down.

But five hours after it took off Falcon was found in a cardboard box in the attic of his family's garage in Fort Collins, Colorado. After he was discovered his father Richard Heene, 48, emerged carrying his son, kissing him and breaking down with relief.

Falcon explained that his father had shouted at him for earlier climbing into the balloon so he decided to hide.

When the family later appeared live on television Mr Heene asked his son: "Did you hear us calling your name at any time? Why didn't you come out?"

Falcon replied haltingly: "You guys said that we did this for a show."

Larimer County Sheriff Jim Alderden said that, while authorities did not currently believe the incident was a hoax, they would question the family again in light of the boy's comment.

"Certainly, that statement that was made last night on the interview raises the questions again," the sheriff said. "Hopefully, they'll be co-operative, and we do intend to pursue additional interviews."

He said that if the dramatic events were shown to have been a hoax compensation would be sought for the cost of the rescue efforts.

Rumours that the event could have been a publicity stunt were fuelled as details of the Heene family's unconventional lifestyle emerged.

In March Mr Keene and his wife Mayumi appeared on the US version of Wife Swap, a reality television programme in which two families temporarily swap mothers.

Mr Heene is also an amateur scientist and stormchaser who takes Falcon and his two brothers, Bradford and Ryo, on trips to see extreme weather events.

The father built the 20ft by 5ft silver helium balloon in his yard and it was designed as a transport vehicle of the future so "people can pull out of their garage and hover 50ft to 100ft above traffic." He also once posted a video of himself on the internet in which he describes Hillary Clinton as a "shape shifting reptilian". :shock:

Mr Heene said he was "appalled" by suggestions that the incident was a pre-planned hoax.

The former weatherman said: "Absolutely not. I'm starting to get a little ticked off because I'm repetitively getting asked this.

"I'm not selling anything. This is what we do all the time. I don't have a can of beans I'm trying to promote. This is just another day in the life of what we do."

His wife Mayumi said: "What we went through the whole day is real. I really thought we might have lost him." Mr Heene explained that, after Falcon was rescued he was showing a television crew where he had hidden, and that was what he meant by the reference to a "doing this for a show".

"Let's clarify. He's six years old and I don't know that he really understood the question," Mr Heene said.


Falcon was sitting next to his father as he was questioned over the comment television. At one point the boy put his head in his hands and was sick into a plastic container held by his mother.

In a separate television interview he said "Mom, I feel like I'm going to vomit" before leaving the room. The family said that his illness was connected to asthma.

They later released a videotape of the balloon leaving the ground. Mr Heene was seen hanging on to it by a rope but the balloon floated away and he then kicked the ground in frustration.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... aucer.html

The irony here seems to be that publicity-seeking Mr. Heene may have been caught out by a prank played by his kids, bringing him more publicity than he really wanted!
 
A hoax is maybe looking more likely. Depends how much store you put in folk who give exclusive interviews to internet gossip sites I suppose. It's an interesting story nonetheless, particularly in the area of some of Heene's more esoteric beliefs.

From Gawker.com

Exclusive: I Helped Richard Heene Plan a Balloon Hoax

For the first time, 25-year-old researcher Robert Thomas reveals to Gawker how earlier this year he and Richard Heene drew up a master plan to generate a massive media controversy using a weather balloon. To get famous, of course.

Thomas spent several months earlier this year working on developing a reality science TV show to pitch to networks - the "show," Thomas says, that Falcon was referring to when he told CNN "We did it for the show." Among the ideas that Heene, Thomas and two others came up with for their reality TV proposal — and one that he says most intrigued Heene — involved a weather balloon modified to look like a UFO which they would launch in an attempt to drum up media interest in both the Heene family and the series he was desperate to get on the air. Still, Thomas never imagined that Heene would involve his six-year-old son in what he is certain was a "global media hoax" to further Richard Heene's own celebrity. Thomas' story of his time with Heene, based on an interview with Ryan Tate, follows below. It's a fascinating account and after he publicly offered to sell his story, we paid him for it.

etc etc.

The main points are

* Robert Thomas is a self-identified "web entrepreneur" and researcher who worked with Richard Heene at Colorado State University. Thomas loved working with science and electromagnetics since he was a kid, and discovered Heene through his wacky YouTube series.

* Both guys shared interests in mad-scientist questions about the earth's magnetic properties and effects on nature. Thomas starting helping Heene out with his ideas and failing small business, passing out fliers for him.

* Heene went on Wife Swap, went kinda crazy, and developed a superiority complex. Their friendship became less about a shared interest in science and more about Heene and his increasingly megalomaniaical batshit ideas. Most of them had to do with getting on TV again.

* Heene wanted to shop his idea around to a producer he was in contact with from Wife Swap.

* Heene's pitch was: a zany science theory at the beginning of each episode, and at the end, they'd prove or disprove it.

* Heene was crazily firing episode ideas away a mile a minute, one after the other. Robert, who was writing all these ideas down for Heene, was given $15/hour and was promised a lead assistant position on the show by Heene.

* Heene thought they'd use the show to further science. Heene was obsessed with becoming a famous nutty professor. That's where the divide happened. Or as Richard wrote: "He wanted episodes that would shock people and maximize his exposure. And he'd been trying for months. On several occasions, he sat down and told me he'd do whatever it took to make it happen — to win."

* Heene's big idea to launch the show: to manufacture a UFO controversy bigger than Roswell, bigger than anything the world had ever seen before.

* The breaking point: Heene told his then-assistant of Reptilians who could shape-shift that were running the shadow government, and that his fame would enable him to communicate with the masses and expose said Reptillians. He also told Thomas the world was gonna end in a solar flare in 2012, and that they were running out of time.

* Thomas never got paid for the TV work he did with Heene. He passed out a lot of fliers for Heene's general contractor business, which wasn't bringing in cash. Probably because Heene spent too much time on his conspiracy theories and fame attempts. Heene reassured Thomas that it'd pay off. Thomas saw the crazy and got out of dodge.

* On Thursday, he sees the balloon go up. And the Heene's lie about the kid. And a friend, remembering a story Thomas once told him about this guy he worked with, called him up and told him he had to turn Heene in.

* Thomas notes: Heene's attic is too small and difficult to access for a small child to hide in without assistance. Also, that Falcon was the most social, and that those kids never got disciplined by Heene. He never would've hid and feared retribution.

And that's how it went down.
 
Boy takes a Ride

http://www.tmz.com/2009/10/17/balloon-boy-landing-wheat-crop-destroyed/

So recently this week in America a boy was reported by his parents to have hid inside an experimental ufo shaped balloon and the UFO escaped.

A flood of law enforcement officers took to the sky in helicopters to try to help assist the boy and 5 hours later it turns out the boy was in a cardboard box in the attic hiding.

Later the boy and family had an interview with Wolf Blizter on CNN where the kid when asked what he was doing up there, he said " Hiding for a tv show " then the kids father got really upset and kept stating this was not a publicity stunt.

It turns out a lot of speculation is happening whether this was a planned stint and if such people want the family to pay restitution back to the state programs that helped to track the ufo shaped balloon.

Video of the family being interviewed the following day had the kid puking and the family less then concerned over the child's well being.

The kids cover up story of why he was in the attic was that his father was mad at him and he was afraid to see him.....

Anyway it turns out the family has been trying to get a reality tv show but has been back and forth through all news stations over here on whether it was a hoax or whether it was real
 
US balloon parents 'face charges'

A sheriff in the US state of Colorado says the parents of a boy mistakenly believed to have been carried away by a helium balloon will face charges.

Sheriff Jim Alderden was speaking after interviewing the parents of Falcon Heene, aged six, for a second time.

The boy was feared to have been in a weather balloon which flew away on Thursday, but was later found at home.

Sheriff Alderden had earlier said that he did not think Richard and Mayumi Heene were behind a deliberate hoax.

He has not specified what charges will be brought, but the couple have not been arrested.

"We were looking at Class 3 misdemeanour, which hardly seems serious enough given the circumstances," Sheriff Alderden said.

A search warrant is being obtained for the couple's home in Fort Collins, and Sheriff Alderden raised the possibility of federal charges, saying that he was talking to the Federal Aviation Administration

The Heenes are expected to give a press conference later.

etc...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8312912.stm
 
I can't exactly remember the details of the original joke but I am dying for an interviewer, or a law enforcement officer, or even a friend....anyone, to say, "you've let yourself down, you've let your school down"...etc
 
US balloon boy case 'was a hoax'

A US sheriff has said the case of six-year-old Falcon Heene who was believed to be adrift in a hot air balloon, prompting a major alert, was a hoax.

Sheriff Jim Alderden said the parents of the boy were actors and had put on a "good show for us, and we bought it".

Falcon's disappearance became a media drama, but he was later found at home.

The Colorado sheriff said there had been no arrests yet but charges may include conspiracy and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

Some of the most serious charges each carry a maximum sentence of six years in prison and a $500,000 (£305,00) fine. :shock:

Sheriff Alderden said at first the parents' acting abilities had made them appear credible to the police.

But it had become clear when the son referred to his hiding in the attic as part of "a show" during a television interview that they were not telling the the truth.

He said the house of Richard and Mayumi Heene has been searched for evidence that the family was hoping to use the incident to obtain a lucrative contract for a television reality.

"We believe that we have evidence at this point to indicate that it was a publicity stunt done with the hopes of marketing themselves or better marketing themselves for a reality television show at some point in the future," he said.

The family has made previous appearances on a US reality show, Wife Swap.

Police had also found that the balloon was extremely flimsy, made of plywood, cardboard and held together with "string and duct tape".

Sheriff Alderden said the police may seek compensation for the time wasted.

...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8313439.stm
 
I found it funny that on Friday police reported that they will be leaving the family alone until Monday then decided to do a late night raid on the home on Saturday night. The funniest part of it all was the Father giving Wolf Blitz the 3rd degree for even suggesting it was a hoax, however was completely true. Wolf gave a heartfelt apology at the time but will he now recount it? hah

Amazing what people will do to try to be famous, they should have just had 8 kids to get on tv instead of coming up with a plot that makes them look like really terrible parents ;)
 
rynner2 said:
Police had also found that the balloon was extremely flimsy, made of plywood, cardboard and held together with "string and duct tape".

...and wish to interview John Noakes, Peter Purves and Valerie Singleton regarding their whereabouts at the time of the hoax.
 
I thought there was something off at the press conference - I was watching the boys rather than their parents. They looked seriously unhappy and at one point when the older boy was blamed he looked really hurt and upset. I felt bad for him but didn't suspect a hoax at that point. Poor kids.
 
Irresponsible bastards, they should be made to pay for the cost of the emergancy services being called out. As if the police have not got enough to do without being called out on a wild goose chase started by a couple of media hungry twats.
 
now, down to the nitty-gritty.

The Physics of the Balloon Boy
http://www.popsci.com/technology/articl ... alloon-boy
Was it even possible for six-year-old Falcon Heene to have flown inside his balloon?
By Adam Weiner Posted 10.19.2009 at 10:18 am 1 Comment

I guess some people will do anything to get on television. In the media blitz last week, nobody seemed to pause to wonder whether the escaped helium-filled contraption would in fact have sufficient buoyancy to carry a 40-pound boy to a height of 7000 feet. Let's apply some physics to the case.


When talking buoyancy (which is a result of a difference in pressure between the top and bottom of a submerged object), it's all about Archimedes's Principle: The buoyant force acting on an object submerged in a fluid is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.

In the case of a helium balloon, the fluid being displaced is air, and the volume of displaced air is equal to the volume of the balloon. Therefore, the greater the volume of the balloon, the greater the buoyant force acting on it. Mathematically B = DVg, where D is the density of displaced air (1.3 kg/m3), V is the volume and g is the acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s2). In order to lift off of the ground, the upward buoyant force must be greater than the downward force of gravity acting on the contents of the balloon, including the helium, the balloon material, any attached components, and any small boys that publicity, obsessed parents may claim to be on board. According to Newton's Second Law,

B - Mg = Ma


Related Articles
Man Flies from Oregon to Idaho Using Party Balloons
Getting High on Helium
14 Year-Old Boy Survives Close Call With Meteorite

Tags
Technology, The Breakdown, Adam Weiner, balloon boy, balloons, buoyancy, media, movie physics, physics, VideoMg is the weight of the balloon and contents and therefore B must be greater than Mg for the balloon to achieve an upward acceleration of a.

Without being able to perform direct measurements, we can make a rough estimate of the volume of the rig from the video. We're going to approximate the shape to be that of an "oblate spheroid" with a volume V = 4/3?b2c with b being the horizontal radius, and c the vertical radius of the balloon.

Estimating a = 2.2 meters, and b = 1.0 meters we get V ? 20 cubic meters.

resulting in a buoyant force of

B = (1.3 kg/m3 )(20 m3 )(9.8 m/s2 ) = 255 Newtons or 57 pounds.

Is it enough? Well, assuming a smallish six-year-old boy weighs about 40 pounds, and because the weight of helium (D = .18 kg/m3) in the balloon will be

W = Mg = DVg = (.18 kg/m3 ) (20 m3 )(9.8 m/s2)

= 35 Newtons (8 pounds) it appears that we're right on the borderline. We've got 9 pounds left over.

Assuming our volume estimate is in the ballpark, the boy could have been lifted off the ground, if the balloon material and any attached components weighed less than about 9 pounds. Fortunately this was never actually put to the test.

Adam Weiner is the author of Don't Try This at Home! The Physics of Hollywood Movies.
 
Balloon family 'ready for arrest'

The US couple accused of faking the disappearance of their son in a weather balloon are ready to turn themselves in to police, their lawyer says.

David Lane said he shortly expected police in Colorado to bring charges against his client, Richard Heene.

"These folks are absolutely willing to turn themselves in, so I don't want to see a 'perp walk' done for media consumption," Mr Lane told NBC TV.

Mr Heene and wife Mayumi are accused of planning the hoax as a publicity stunt.

The disappearance of their son, six-year-old Falcon Heene, became a media drama, but he was later found at home.

His parents appeared on several TV networks with Falcon and his two brothers to talk about the incident and insist it had not been staged.

Official details of any charges the Heenes might face have not yet been made public.

etc...
 
Balloon boy: police investigating whether TV networks were in on hoax
Police are investigating whether a television company conspired with the Heenes, the family accused of carrying out the "balloon boy" hoax.
By Nick Allen in Los Angeles
Published: 10:18PM BST 19 Oct 2009

Officers said documents showed that a media outlet had agreed to pay money to Richard Heene, who is alleged to have organised the stunt in order to secure his own reality show.

Mr Heene and his wife Mayumi are expected to be charged within days after the alleged hoax in which they claimed their son Falcon, six, had drifted away in an experimental helium balloon built in their garden in Fort Collins, Colorado.

Larimer County Sheriff Jim Alderden said investigators were now looking for other "conspirators". He did not name the media outlet but said it was a show that blurs "the line between entertainment and news."

Investigators also want to talk to Robert Thomas, a friend of Mr Heene's who claimed to have discussed a balloon hoax with him as part of a plan to promote Mr Heene's proposed reality show.

Mr Thomas, who sold his story to a US website, said the show was intended to feature Mr Heene, who believes in aliens, as a mad scientist carrying out experiments.

He revealed an email from Mr Heene that proposed launching a UFO-like balloon in order to achieve a "dramatic increase in local and national awareness about The Heene Family, our Reality Series".

Mr Thomas said he acted as a researcher for Mr Heene and two other people also worked on proposals for the show.

After being told he was likely to be charged a tearful Mr Heene said his family was "seeking counsel" and added: "This thing has become so convoluted," David Lane, the Heenes' lawyer, said the couple wanted to turn themselves in and avoid the "public spectacle" of being arrested in front of their sons.

Mr Heene has described himself as an amateur scientist but Sheriff Alderden said he only had a high school education. "He may be nutty but he's not a professor," the sheriff said.

Sheriff Alderden said child protection services had been contacted over the welfare of Falcon and his two brothers, Bradford and Ryo.

He said: "We have a concern but we didn't have enough that would allow us to physically take the kids from that environment."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldne ... -hoax.html

Oh what a tangled web we weave,
When first we practise to deceive!
Sir Walter Scott
 
The first great balloon hoax
The Heene family aren't the first to come up with a balloon-based con: Edgar Allan Poe did it in 1844, writes Aida Edemariam
The Guardian, Tuesday 20 October 2009

Quite why the Heene family of Colorado thought pretending to lose their son in the basket of an airborne helium balloon was a good idea is unclear. But as they contemplate possible criminal records for conspiracy and contributing to the delinquency of a minor, they can at least take comfort in the fact that they have distinguished company when it comes to balloon hoaxes.

On 13 April 1844, the New York Sun published a breathless account of a great step for mankind: "The air, as well as the earth and the ocean, has been subdued by science, and will become a common and convenient highway for mankind . . . The Atlantic has been actually crossed in a balloon . . . and in the inconceivably brief period of 75 hours from shore to shore!"

In a precursor of the reality shows to which the Heenes apparently aspired, the Sun ran excerpts from the faked diary of the Victoria's navigators, which ended just after their "sighting" off the coast of South Carolina. (In reality, the Atlantic would not be crossed by a balloon until 75 years later, when the rather less romantically named British dirigible R-34 landed in New York City after an 108-hour flight.)

The account was cooked up by Edgar Allan Poe, a hoax-lover in an age of hoax-lovers; he perpetrated five others. Poe seems to have rather enjoyed the fuss: "On the morning (Saturday) of its announcement," he later wrote in the Columbia Spy, "the whole square surrounding the Sun building was literally besieged, blocked up from a period soon after sunrise until about two o'clock PM . . . I never witnessed more intense excitement to get possession of a newspaper. . . I tried, in vain, during the whole day, to get possession of a copy."

But the excitement was not allowed to get out of hand. Two days later, the Sun printed a retraction: "BALLOON – The mails from the South last Saturday night not having brought a confirmation of the arrival of the Balloon from England . . . we are inclined to believe that the intelligence is erroneous." And so the first great media balloon hoax was punctured.

Poe had created the report by supposedly "copying verbatim from the joint diary of Mr Monck Mason and Mr Harrison Ainsworth", also crediting them for "much verbal information respecting the balloon itself, its construction, and other matters of interest . . ."

etc...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/global/2009/o ... lloon-hoax
 
The story gets more Fortean...

Balloon boy's father 'wanted TV fame before world ends in 2012'

Richard Heene, the man suspected of the alleged "balloon boy" hoax, was driven by a conviction that the world will come to a cataclysmic end in 2012, according to a friend


Robert Thomas, who claims to have been a confidante and researcher for Mr Heene, has been interviewed by police.

Mr Thomas's lawyer, Linda Lee, claimed: "Heene believes the world is going to end in 2012. Because of that he wanted to make money quickly, become rich enough to build a bunker or something underground, where he can be safe from the sun exploding."

It was the latest disclosure about Mr Heene's bizarre world view, which also allegedly includes a belief in aliens and UFOs.

The suggestion that the world will come to an end in 2012 is based on an interpretation of the ancient Mayan calendar.

It is also the subject of a soon to be released Hollywood blockbuster called "2012".

However, scientists and Mayans themselves have debunked the theory.

Police believe Mr Heene and his wife Mayumi planned a hoax in which an experimental helium balloon was "accidentally" released from their back garden in Fort Collins, Colorado.

They then claimed the youngest child, six-year-old Falcon, was on board.

However, authorities suspect it was a publicity stunt to gain attention for a proposed reality television show about the Heene family.

Mr Thomas said he had nothing to do with the hoax and didn't know about the balloon being launched until he saw it on television.

Police have been poring over e-mails, phone records and financial documents from the Heene home as they consider charges.

Mr Heene emerged briefly from the house on Tuesday morning but said nothing.

He showed two delivery workers where to find five helium tanks that were being returned to a rental company.

The local sheriff said charges he is seeking against the Heenes include conspiracy, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, making a false report to authorities, and attempting to influence a public servant.

The most serious charges are felonies and carry a maximum sentence of six years in prison.

Telegraph.co.uk
 
sherbetbizarre said:
The most serious charges are felonies and carry a maximum sentence of six years in prison.

Imagine being banged up if the Cataclysm happens!!

I was going to say "when the balloon goes up" but I just couldn't bring myself to do it.

mooks out
 
Back
Top