The technical term for this smell is “petrichor,” and it turns out that it is caused when raindrops actually aerosolize as they bounce off a porous surface — the micro-scale pits actually end up with air dropped inside them as the drop comes down from above. As the tiny pockets of air become compressed, they eventually burst upward due to the pressure and bubble up through the puddled raindrop, carrying small amounts of the raindrop with them. This aerosol effect can create droplet-carrying particles of soil or rock, bacteria, or even viruses from the ground and carry them up on bubbles of air, like champagne molecules entering our nose on bubbles of rapidly expanding CO2.
吹水部落, Blog where I share what I saw, what I heard, what I like, and what I interested
Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts
27 January 2015
High-speed video shows us why rain smells
The technical term for this smell is “petrichor,” and it turns out that it is caused when raindrops actually aerosolize as they bounce off a porous surface — the micro-scale pits actually end up with air dropped inside them as the drop comes down from above. As the tiny pockets of air become compressed, they eventually burst upward due to the pressure and bubble up through the puddled raindrop, carrying small amounts of the raindrop with them. This aerosol effect can create droplet-carrying particles of soil or rock, bacteria, or even viruses from the ground and carry them up on bubbles of air, like champagne molecules entering our nose on bubbles of rapidly expanding CO2.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)