Carl Klutzke ([info]sirvalence) wrote,
@ 2008-04-22 10:57:00
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How Smell Works
I thought today's Straight Dope mail bag article was particularly interesting. I remember when I was pretty young a friend mentioned that he hated going into livestock barns, because he knew if he could smell the manure, manure molecules must be in the air and getting all over him. He was right.

I've wondered for some time if we would ever be able to mechanically reproduce smells the way we do with light and sound: perhaps something that releases samples from the seven primary odorant groupings (camphoric, musky, rose, peppermint, etherial, pungent, and putrid) could do a worthwhile but limited simulation, sort of like black & white TV does for vision. You'd have to periodically replenish the chemicals, I assume.

It was also interesting to me to learn that you can't actually smell metal, but smell instead the oxidated lipids upon them. Come to think of it, maybe that's why all metals seem to smell the same.



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[info]skywardshadow
2008-04-22 03:29 pm UTC (link)
Another good read, though I hope I forget it next time I'm using the restrooms at work.

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[info]blackbear88
2008-04-25 11:09 am UTC (link)
Almost any odor you can imagine is commercially available--one of our staff is known as the Fragrance Woman because it was her job to procure the smells we use in Dinosphere (magnolia, pine trees, manure) and in Power of Children (chicken and gravy, potroast.) For a while you'd walk past her cube and be all "Karen? Why do I smell popcorn? Why do I smell bread baking?" :)

I'm not sure if this is what you mean by mechanical reproduction. (And I didn't click your link yet, will do later--so maybe this already came up.) But these things basically come as a solid substance in a can, and we have to replenish the dispensers on a regular basis.

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[info]sirvalence
2008-04-25 11:54 am UTC (link)
That's kinda nifty, but it's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about the ability to produce a facsimile of a desired scent on demand, rather than having a stock of known scents to select from. Specifically, to be able have a home gaming computer / console (or even a TV) that emitted the scents of a pine forest or dungeon or sea breeze when that was depicted on the screen. (Obviously there would need to be some mechanism for the game/show to tell the device what scent to emit.) It would be the olfactory equivalent of speakers or video: smell-o-vision, if you will.

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[info]blackbear88
2008-04-26 10:05 pm UTC (link)
Hmm, that would be intriguing! And just what would a dungeon smell like, exactly? :)

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