Smoke ring
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A smoke ring is a visible vortex ring formed by sudden release of smoke. It can be created by blowing smoke from the mouth, quickly lighting a cigarette lighter and putting it out or holding a burning incense stick or a cigarette vertically, pushing it with the burning side up and suddenly pulling it back (or just stopping it).
In general, a smoke ring occurs when a mass of fluid from the mouth is impulsively pushed through a roughly circular opening, forming a vortex ring just outside of the opening. The smoke ring travels roughly straight from the opening and maintains its shape until dispersed by turbulence or other interference. The smoke serves to make the flow pattern of the air visible, and does not significantly affect the fluid behavior. Another method of creating a smoke ring involves releasing a mass of fluid with a different density than the surrounding fluid. This can be done in several ways:
Releasing air underwater forms rings of bubbles. Scuba divers often do this, and dolphins have also been observed performing this trick.[1]
A vortex ring[2] or smoke ring can be formed in the atmosphere by a rising (falling) mass of warm (cold) air, which is also called a thermal (microburst). One is occasionally at the core of a mushroom cloud, and they can be seen at fire eater presentations.
A museum in San Francisco called the Exploratorium has an interactive exhibit that blows large smoke rings.
Contents
Cigarettes and cigars
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There are five main ways of making a smoke ring with the mouth.[citation needed] Although all require the formation of an 'O' with the mouth, they differ in the way the smoke is physically expelled. The first technique is to let smoke into the mouth, then gently flick the tongue to expel a short burst of smoke. The second is to let smoke into the mouth, then while pushing the jaw out, slowly open and close the jaw to push smoke out. The third is to form the 'O' with the lips, then gently say just the very beginning of 'Oh'. The fourth technique is to let smoke into the mouth, and then tap your cheek. The fifth technique differs from the previous three in that one does not need to fill up the mouth with smoke beforehand because the smoke is actually being expelled from the lungs, not the mouth. Most smokers blow rings using some combination of these five techniques. A trick often performed in conjunction with mouth-blown smoke rings is the French inhale. A lit cigarette or stick of incense can also be used to create a smoke ring. To do this, hold it vertically and quickly raise it about ten centimetres, then gently pull it back down. This creates the vortex needed to create a smoke ring.
Vapour rings
It is also possible to create a vapour ring by using the same techniques on a cold day with only one's breath.[2]
Cooking
A smoke ring is also the name for the pink ring that forms around the edges of meat prepared by smoking, caused by myoglobin in the meat reacting with nitric oxide to form the heat stable pigment nitrosohemochrome, as nitrite salts do in cured meats.[citation needed]
Volcanoes
Under particular conditions, some volcanic vents can produce large visible smoke rings[3]. It is a rare phenomenon but several volcanoes have been observed emitting massive vortex rings of steam and gas:
- Mount Etna[4][5][6], Italy (Sicily)
- Stromboli [7], Italy (Aeolian Islands)
- Eyjafjallajökull[8], Iceland
- Hekla[9], Iceland
- Tungurahua[10], Ecuador
- Pacaya[11], Guatemala
- Mount Redoubt[12], USA (Alaska)
- Aso-san[13], Japan (Kyushu)
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
See also
References
- ↑ Don White. "Mystery of the Silver Rings". http://www.earthtrust.org/delrings.html. Retrieved 2007-10-25.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Ring-shaped vortices Caelestia. Retrieved: 2011-12-16.
- ↑ http://www.volcanodiscovery.com/photoglossary/smoke_ring.html Illustrated Volcano Glossary
- ↑ Etna hoops it up BBC News, 2003-03-31.
- ↑ Etna 2000 Stromboli Online, 2009-03-12.
- ↑ http://video.it.msn.com/watch/video/miracolo-etna-dal-cratere-anelli-di-fumo-perfetti/168go5fdp Smoke rings of Mount Etna video
- ↑ http://www.volcanodiscovery.com/fr/photos/stromboli/0606/smokerings.html
- ↑ Iceland Volcano Blows Spectacular Smoke Ring: Big Pics Discovery News, 2010-05-10.
- ↑ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthpicturegalleries/7498695/Iceland-volcano-eruption-volcanic-activity-in-the-land-of-fire-and-ice.html?image=11
- ↑ http://earth-of-fire.over-blog.com/article-les-volcans-fument-la-pipe-formation-de-vortex-toroidal-69760899.html
- ↑ http://skagwaydelta.wordpress.com/2011/05/15/pacaya-volcano-blows-a-smoke-ring-in-farewell-guatemala-2005/
- ↑ http://www.flickr.com/photos/31220278@N05/3880927815/
- ↑ http://www.flickr.com/photos/mikelyvers/6890803977/
External links
- How to puff a smoke ring?
- Blowing a smoke ring (wikiHow)
- Smoke rings generated by eruptions of Etna volcano
- Smoke rings from Stromboli volcano
- Official Smokerings website
- Instructions on building a smoke ring cannon
- Smoke rings at US Army disposals in Iraq (see images on bottom)
- Thomson, Sir William (Lord Kelvin), On Vortex Atoms, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Vol. VI, 1867, pp. 94–105.
- Silliman, Robert H., William Thomson: Smoke Rings and Nineteenth-Century Atomism, Isis, Vol. 54, No. 4. (Dec., 1963), pp. 461–474. JSTOR link
- Movie of a modern recreation of Tait's smoke ring experiment
- How to Blow Smoke Rings - Howiwde:Rauchring