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Facts everyone needs to know!

 
 
Reyn
 
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 06:51 pm
Fart Facts


Where does fart gas come from?

The gas in our intestines comes from several sources: air we swallow, gas seeping into our intestines from our blood, gas produced by chemical reactions in our guts, and gas produced by bacteria living in our guts.

Why are beans so notorious for making people fart?

Beans contain sugars that we humans cannot digest. The most offensive sugars, known as "flatulence factors" to scientists who research farts, are raffinose, stachiose, and verbascose. When these sugars reach our intestines, the bacteria go wild, have a big feast, and make lots of gas!

Other notorious fart-producing foods include corn, bell peppers, cauliflower, cabbage, milk, bread, eggs, beer, and raisins. People unable to digest milk due to lactose intolerance will suffer extreme flatulence if they consume dairy products.

A friend of mine had a dog who was exceptionally fond of apples and turnips. The dog would eat these things and then get prodigious gas. A dog's digestive system is not equipped to handle such vegetable matter, so the dog's bacteria worked overtime to produce remarkable flatulence.

What makes farts stink?

The odor of farts comes from small amounts of hydrogen sulfide gas and mercaptans in the mixture. These compounds contain sulfur. Nitrogen-rich compounds such as skatole and indole also add to the stench of farts. The more sulfur-rich your diet, the more sulfides and mercaptans will be produced by the bacteria in your guts, and the more your farts will stink. Foods such as cauliflower, eggs and meat are notorious for producing smelly farts, whereas beans produce large amounts of not particularly stinky farts.

Why do farts make noise?

The sounds are produced by vibrations of the anal opening. Sounds depend on the velocity of expulsion of the gas and the tightness of the sphincter muscles of the anus. Contrary to a popular misconception, fart noise is not generated by the flapping of the butt cheeks.

Why are stinky farts generally warmer and quieter than regular farts?

Most fart gas comes from swallowed air and consists largely of nitrogen and carbon dioxide, the oxygen having been absorbed by the time it reaches the anal opening. These gases are odorless, although they often pick up other (and more odiferous) components on the way through the bowel. They emerge from the anus in fairly large bubbles at body temperature. A person can often achieve a good sound with these voluminous farts, but they are commonly (but not always!) mundane with respect to odor, and don't feel particularly warm.

Another major source of fart gas is bacterial action. Bacterial fermentation and digestion processes produce heat as a byproduct as well as various pungent gases. The resulting bubbles of gas tend to be small, hot, and concentrated with stinky bacterial metabolic products. These emerge as the notorious, warm, SBD (Silent-But-Deadly), often in amounts too small to produce a good sound, but excelling in stench.

How much gas does a normal person pass per day?

On average, a person produces about half a liter of fart gas per day, distributed over an average of about fourteen daily farts.

Whereas it may be difficult for you to determine your daily flatus volume, you can certainly keep track of your daily numerical fart count. You might try this as a science fair project: Keep a journal of everything you eat and a count of your farts. You might make a note of the potency of their odor as well. See if you can discover a relationship between what you eat, how much you fart, and how much they smell.

How does a fart travel to the anus?

One may wonder why fart gas travels downward toward the anus when gas has a lower density than liquids and solids, and should therefore travel upwards.

The intestine squeezes its contents toward the anus in a series of contractions, a process called peristalsis. The process is stimulated by eating, which is why we often need to poop and fart right after a meal. Peristalsis creates a zone of high pressure, forcing all intestinal contents, gas included, to move towards a region of lower pressure, which is toward the anus. Gas is more mobile than other components, and small bubbles coalesce to from larger bubbles en route to the exit. When peristalsis is not active, gas bubbles may begin to percolate upwards again, but they won't get very far due to the complicated and convoluted shape of the intestine. Furthermore, the anus is neither up nor down when a person is lying down.

Why do farts come out of your butt?

The butt is the location of the anus in humans, and by definition, a fart is an anal escape of intestinal gas. We should be grateful that we are not crinoids. The crinoid is a marine creature with a U-shaped gut, and its anus is located next to its mouth.

How long does it take fart gas to travel to someone else's nose?

Fart travel time depends on atmospheric conditions such as humidity, temperature and wind speed and direction, the molecular weight of the fart particles, and the distance between the fart transmitter and the fart receiver. Farts also disperse (spread out) as they leave the source, and their potency diminishes with dilution. Generally, if the fart is not detected within a few seconds, it will be too dilute for perception and will be lost into the atmosphere forever.

Exceptional conditions exist when the fart is released into a small enclosed area such as an elevator, a small room, or a car. These conditions limit the amount of dilution possible, and the fart may remain in a smellable concentration for a long period of time, until it condenses on the walls.

Why is there a 13 to 20 second delay between farting and the time it starts to smell?

Actually, the fart stinks immediately upon emergence, but it takes several seconds for the odor to travel to the farter's nostrils. If farts could travel at the speed of sound, we would smell them almost instantly, at the same time we hear them.

Is it true that some people never fart?

No, not if they're alive. People even fart shortly after death.

Do even movie stars fart?

Yes, of course. So do grandmothers, priests, kings, opera singers, beauty queens, and nuns. Even Presidents farts.

Do men fart more than women?

No, women fart just as much as men. It's just that most men take more pride in it than most women. There is a large variation among individuals in the amount of fart gas produced per day, but the variation does not correlate with gender.

I have read that men fart more often than women. If this is true, then women must be saving it up and expelling more gas per fart than men do.

Do men's farts smell worse than women's farts?

Based on what I have experienced of women's farts, all I can say is that I hope not. Scientific studies of farts show that women's farts have a higher concentration of odor-causing gases than men's farts, but men's farts have a larger volume. The two factors equalize out (the same number of stench molecules for both), so the odor is about the same.

At what time of day is a gentleman most likely to fart?

A gentleman is mostly likely to fart first thing in the morning, while in the bathroom. This is known as "morning thunder," and if the gentleman gets good resonance, it can be heard throughout the household.

What things other than diet can make a person fart more than usual?

People who swallow a lot of air fart more than people who don't. This can be cured somewhat by chewing with your mouth closed, eating more slowly, and not gulping food or liquids. Chewing gum, smoking, and sucking on candy also can cause a person to swallow more air.

Carbonated drinks give a person extra gas. Nervous people with fast moving bowels will fart more because less air is absorbed out of the intestines. Some disease conditions can cause excess flatulence. Going up in an airplane or other low-pressure environment can cause the gas inside you to expand and emerge as flatus. Tilting your head back and pouring a drink straight down your gullet (chugging) also leads to an excess of swallowed air, and hence, farting.

Is a fart really just a burp that comes out the wrong end?

No, a burp emerges from the stomach and has a different chemical composition from a fart. Farts have less atmospheric gas content and more bacterial gas content than burps.

Is it harmful to hold in farts?

There are differences in opinion on this one. Certainly, people have believed for centuries that retaining flatus is bad for the health. Emperor Claudius even passed a law legalizing farting at banquets out of concern for people's health. There was a widespread belief that a person could be poisoned or catch a disease by retaining farts.

Doctors I have spoken to recently have told me that there is no particular harm in holding in farts. Farts will not poison you; they are a natural component of your intestinal contents. The worst thing that can happen is that you may get a stomach ache from the gas pressure. But one doctor suggested that pathological distention of the bowel could result if a person holds in farts too much. And Dr. P. said that the effort involved in retaining flatus can cause hemorrhoids.

How long would it be possible to not fart?

As I understand it, a captive fart can escape as soon as the person relaxes. This means that a lot of people who assiduously refrain from farting during the day do so at great length as soon as they fall asleep. Having been on a great many overnight field trips, long bus trips, and trans-Pacific flights, I can personally vouch for the fact that lots of people do fart voluminously as they doze off. So the answer to the question would be, you can refrain from farting as long as you can stay awake!

Do all people fart in their sleep?

I have not made a scientific study of this, but I don't think all people fart in their sleep. I think mainly those who refuse to fart when they're awake do so when dozing off. For other people, toilet training takes such a strong hold that they let nothing pass their sphincters in sleep. For these people, the gas accumulates in the night and they vent it upon awakening.

Where do farts go when you hold them in?

How often have you held in a fart, intending to release it at the first appropriate opportunity, only to find that the fart has disappeared when you are ready for it?

I asked several doctors where the fart goes. Does it leak out slowly without the person knowing it? Is it absorbed into the bloodstream? What happens to it?

The doctors agree that the fart is neither released nor absorbed. It simply migrates back upward into the intestine and comes out later.

It is reassuring to know that such farts aren't really lost, just delayed.

How can one cover up a fart?

There is a company called Fartypants that sells underwear designed to absorb the odor of farts. If you should be caught without your Fartypants, another ploy is to blame the dog or cat, if one should be present, or complain about how the wind must be blowing from the direction of the paper mill.

As for the sound... if you are in a large group of people, act oblivious and innocent, or glance quickly at the person next to you, as if you think he/she did it. Other strategies include coughing or suddenly moving your chair so that people think that they misheard the fart. If you are with one other person, you can act as if nothing happened, and the other person may believe he was mistaken in thinking he heard a fart.

CJT addresses the problem of farting loudly in a public restroom as follows: "My solution: use a handful of loose toilet paper, cover your butt hole and it will muffle the farting; my friends and I call it the 'Buff Muff'!"

Depending upon the company, another strategy is not to cover it up, but to proudly proclaim the fart as your own grand accomplishment and to issue a challenge to the others to outdo that one if they think they can.

Is it really possible to ignite farts?

The answer to that is yes! However, you should be aware that people get injured igniting flatus. Not only can the flame back up into your colon, but your clothing or other surroundings may catch on fire. A survey done by Fartcloud (the site, alas! is no more) indicates that about a quarter of the people who ignited their farts got burned doing it. Ignition of flatus is a hazardous practice. There have also been cases in which intestinal gases with a higher than normal oxygen content have exploded during surgery when electric cautery was used by the surgeon.

Why is possible to burn farts?

Farts burn because they contain methane (sometimes) and hydrogen, both of which are flammable gases. (Hydrogen was the same gas that was used in the ill fated Hindenburg dirigible.)

Farts burn with a blue or yellow flame. According to Dr. James L. A. Roth, a blue flame is indicative of the presence of methane in the flatus. Since methane producers are an elite group (only 1/3 of the population), an exclusive club called the Royal Order of the Blue Flame has been established that is open only to them.

Is it possible to light a match with a fart?

No, even strike-anywhere matches have their limits, unless the fart has the consistency of sandpaper! Any fart that rough I would hesitate to call a fart. Also, farts have the same temperature as the body from which they emerge, and aren't hot enough to initiate combustion.

Is it possible for a talented person to earn a living through flatulence?

Few people earn their living directly via flatulence. But a friend of mine says that he saw a carnival act in which the performer whistled tunes with his farts, blew out candles on the opposite side of the stage, and sent flames all the way across the stage. A famous performer who earned his living this way was Le Petomane , who performed in France at the beginning of the 20th Century. However, my friend isn't old enough to have seen Le Petomane, so maybe he had a chance to see Mr. Methane.

Mr. Methane lays claim to the distinction of being the world's only performing flatulist. whose CD can be purchased at the FartMart.

However, people may also earn a living through the prevention of flatulence (as do the manufacturers and sellers of Beano and other products), through the practice of medicine specializing in the treatment of flatulence and other gastrointestinal problems, by writing books about flatulence (see the question before this one), and through the production and sales of various fart gags such as whoopee cushions and farts in a can.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 1,100 • Replies: 15
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DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 07:39 pm
The avatar is apt.
0 Replies
 
Green Witch
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 07:53 pm
I didn't see this mentioned, but if you eat fenugreek (an herb/spice) your farts will smell like maple syrup. This will also work on dogs. As a child I used to sprinkle a little fenugreek on our bulldog's dinner, that way he could sleep in my bedroom and not wake me up with his usual gassy odor.
0 Replies
 
Chai
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 08:36 pm
You've inspired me once again reyn.

tomorrow, so help me god, I'm going to count every fart I fart.

I'll get back to you with the results.
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 10:52 pm
DrewDad wrote:
The avatar is apt.

Drew, here is a riddle:
"Which came first, the chicken or the egg?"

While we're at it, if someone farts in the forest and no one is there to hear, did it really happen? Shocked

Green Witch wrote:
I didn't see this mentioned, but if you eat fenugreek (an herb/spice) your farts will smell like maple syrup.

I could see that this information could come in real handy for crowded spaces, especially during the Christmas shopping season. The atmosphere will smell like a pancake breakfast.

Thanks for the tip! :wink:

Chai Tea wrote:
You've inspired me once again reyn.

tomorrow, so help me god, I'm going to count every fart I fart.

I'll get back to you with the results.

Embarrassed You make me blush! I'm glad that you will do this research for the site. I hope more will become actively involved.

By the way, can you put the data together for us in a bar graph form, paying particular attention to the time of day? This is vital.

Thanks, you're a peach! :wink:
0 Replies
 
NickFun
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 11:11 pm
Hey! Who cut the pancakes???
0 Replies
 
martybarker
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 11:17 pm
Can you add a poll to this post?

I think that if someone farts in the forest they can just blame it on a bear.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Sun 26 Nov, 2006 11:41 pm
Quote:
While we're at it, if someone farts in the forest and no one is there to hear, did it really happen?


That's the tactic I use in the grocery store. If I feel one of those deadly silent ones coming on, I'll find an empty aisle and let 'er rip before quickly darting to the end. Cracks me up to be on the other side and hear people commenting on the smell in the other aisle. ::::walks off with such an innocent look on her face::::
0 Replies
 
Chai
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Nov, 2006 06:23 am
Reyn wrote:
[ Embarrassed You make me blush! I'm glad that you will do this research for the site. I hope more will become actively involved.

By the way, can you put the data together for us in a bar graph form, paying particular attention to the time of day? This is vital.





6:25am - subject woke @ 5am - cut one while abed....no activity since then. Slow start but we can only hope.
0 Replies
 
material girl
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Nov, 2006 07:24 am
I dont think Ive ever farted in my sleep, I find it very difficult to sleep if I need to fart.
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Nov, 2006 10:22 am
martybarker wrote:
Can you add a poll to this post?

I think that if someone farts in the forest they can just blame it on a bear.

I thinking no one will want to own up. :wink:
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Nov, 2006 10:24 am
Butrflynet wrote:
Quote:
While we're at it, if someone farts in the forest and no one is there to hear, did it really happen?


That's the tactic I use in the grocery store. If I feel one of those deadly silent ones coming on, I'll find an empty aisle and let 'er rip before quickly darting to the end. Cracks me up to be on the other side and hear people commenting on the smell in the other aisle. ::::walks off with such an innocent look on her face::::

Laughing Good, very good. :wink:

Actually, this brings a nice new twist to this thread: Strategies as to how to handle "The Big Ones". Laughing
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Nov, 2006 10:26 am
Chai Tea wrote:
Reyn wrote:
[ Embarrassed You make me blush! I'm glad that you will do this research for the site. I hope more will become actively involved.

By the way, can you put the data together for us in a bar graph form, paying particular attention to the time of day? This is vital.

6:25am - subject woke @ 5am - cut one while abed....no activity since then. Slow start but we can only hope.

Only one? What an amateur! :wink:

A pro would have something perculating from last night.

Okay, now I expect the count to climb drastically by the evening.

What's for lunch?
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Nov, 2006 10:27 am
material girl wrote:
I dont think Ive ever farted in my sleep, I find it very difficult to sleep if I need to fart.

Another amateur!

A pro (like myself) wakes himself up while being breezy while one sleeps. :wink:
0 Replies
 
Reyn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 27 Nov, 2006 07:16 pm
Chai Tea wrote:
You've inspired me once again reyn.

tomorrow, so help me god, I'm going to count every fart I fart.

I'll get back to you with the results.

[tap, tap, tap]

I'm still waiting for today's report.

What was for supper?
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Wed 29 Nov, 2006 05:10 am
How to deal with the really big ones?
http://butrfly.net/Albums/MiscellaneousGoodies/images/farts.jpg_fl.jpg
"Don't say I didn't warn you!"
0 Replies
 
 

 
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