There is perhaps no other sound in the culinary world that evokes immediate recognition quite like the noise popcorn makes when it’s popping, whether in a pan on the stove, a bag in the microwave or some kind of popping machine. But while we know the temperature at which popcorn pops*, why exactly corn makes that popping noise when turning itself into those fluffy kernels is a question science hadn’t quite answered yet… until now [cue suspenseful music].
The short answer: Water vapor that builds up inside the kernel when the popcorn is heated is expelled rapidly, while the cavity inside the kernel acts as an “acoustic resonator,” resulting in an audible pop, says a team of French scientists in a new study published today in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.
“Such a scenario has been applied to … the ‘pop’ of a champagne bottle cork,” the authors add.
The team used high-speed imaging techniques to study the popping corn at 2,900 frames per second, to show that the kernel is shot into the air by a “leg” of expanding starch that pushes off the heated plate, much like an acrobat performing a somersault.
Above a critical vapor pressure, the hull breaks apart, while the starch in the popcorn expands to form “a spongy flake of various shapes,” better known as the stuff you pour butter on and put in your mouth.
“As a result, popcorn is midway between two categories of moving systems: explosive plants using fracture mechanisms and jumping animals using muscles,” the authors write. “By synchronizing video recordings with acoustic recordings, we propose that the familiar ‘pop’ sound of the popcorn is caused by the release of water vapour.”
And there you have it. Now time for some popcorn.
*100 degrees Celsius or 212 Fahrenheit
by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist
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