How
Do They Make the Pope Smoke?
For a bit more than a century, the cardinals
have signaled their progress by sending colored smoke up the chapel chimney.
Black smoke signifies a vote didn’t produce a pope, and white means it did.
When the tradition began, the light smoke was
produced by the burning ballots and some dry straw, and the darker smoke by the
ballots and wet straw. The results weren’t always black and white, though, and
sometimes the smoke signal left the outside world confused. During the 1958
conclave, white smoke plumed from the chimney after one vote. The crowds
gathered outside the chapel cheered and Vatican Radio announced that the church
had a pope.
Just a few minutes later though, the smoke
started to turn dark. The straw that the cardinals added to the fire didn’t
take right away, and needed some time to get going.
To avoid this sort of confusion, the
cardinals and Vatican officials have tried a few different things to make the
two smoke colors, and the election results, more foolproof. They tried smoke
bombs for the black smoke in the 1960s. While they left no question about the color,
they also filled the room with smoke, sending the cardinals into coughing fits.
After that, they tried Italian army flares, and while the color was clear at
first, the smoke quickly turned gray, leaving some observers scratching their
heads.
In 2005, the Vatican went high-tech, and
introduced an “auxiliary smoke-emitting device” that was fed chemical
cartridges that could produce clearly colored smoke for up to six minutes. What
was in the cartridges was anyone’s guess. The Vatican was oddly secretive about
them and would only say that they were prepared from “several different
elements.”
Yesterday, though, the Vatican revealed their
smoke recipe and technique. The smoke device has a compartment where “different
coloured-smoke generating compounds can be mixed,” the Vatican press office
said in a statement. “The result is requested by means of an electronic control
panel and lasts for several minutes while the ballots are burning in the other
stove.”
The
black smoke is made from a mix of potassium perchlorate (an inorganic salt
commonly used as an oxidizer in colored fireworks and other pyrotechnics),
anthracene (a hyrocarbon component of coal tar) and sulfur. The white smoke is
produced by mixing potassium chlorate (a similar compound to potassium perchlorate,
used in fireworks and smoke bombs), lactose (the sugar found in cow’s milk) and
rosin (a conifer resin).
Read the full text here: http://mentalfloss.com/article/49429/how-do-they-make-pope-smoke#ixzz2NUw6yjVj
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