Which Way does the smell go??

atcjon

Well-Known Member
When growing, does the smell of plants rise like heat or is it all over. i have to put 2 vents in my flower room almost at ground level but if the smell will go out of it when my exhaust isnt on then it wont work. anyone that is actually doing this that can help? it would be great
 

flamdrags420

Well-Known Member
From : http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/features/columns/?article=bn_smell


How smells travel
Smells travel in the air by what's called diffusion. Molecules are always moving, bumping and jostling each other, so they mix. The rate of natural mixing or diffusion depends on how often molecules encounter one another. The same with how long it takes a smell to dissipate. If the wind is blowing, there will be more mixing. That can either make the smell reach you sooner, or it can spread the smell out so that you don't notice it at all. Predators such as lions, tigers, and bears always approach their prey from downwind to keep their own scents from alerting whatever they're hunting to their presence.
The speed with which a smell travels depends on how fast the molecules are going, how massive they are, the relative temperature of the molecules making the smell, and how many molecules there are in a given volume, their density. We express all this mathematically as a gas's temperature and pressure. By the way, our brains are quite used to air, so for the most part, we don't smell oxygen, nitrogen, or carbon dioxide; we smell the other molecules instead.
 

atcjon

Well-Known Member
From : http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/features/columns/?article=bn_smell


How smells travel
Smells travel in the air by what's called diffusion. Molecules are always moving, bumping and jostling each other, so they mix. The rate of natural mixing or diffusion depends on how often molecules encounter one another. The same with how long it takes a smell to dissipate. If the wind is blowing, there will be more mixing. That can either make the smell reach you sooner, or it can spread the smell out so that you don't notice it at all. Predators such as lions, tigers, and bears always approach their prey from downwind to keep their own scents from alerting whatever they're hunting to their presence.
The speed with which a smell travels depends on how fast the molecules are going, how massive they are, the relative temperature of the molecules making the smell, and how many molecules there are in a given volume, their density. We express all this mathematically as a gas's temperature and pressure. By the way, our brains are quite used to air, so for the most part, we don't smell oxygen, nitrogen, or carbon dioxide; we smell the other molecules instead.
Layman's Terms please??
 

PotRoastDinner

New Member
essentially itsd just saying that the smell will move with whichever way the air is flowing.. it will come out of whatever you have a fan hooked up to, regardless of location. good post flam.
 

atcjon

Well-Known Member
but do you have personal experience with this situation? i do appreciate the time spent helping me
 

flamdrags420

Well-Known Member
yes I do. I have been smelling for over 30 years. When I cook it smells my house up with greatness. But when I over cook, I use a fan to get rid of it. With a north wind I can smell the sugar factory 10 miles away. On an easterly wind I can smell the pig farm.
 
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