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  • Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. And today, we're going to talk about farts.

  • What are they? How do they define us?

  • And how much weight do we loose every time we fart?

  • Now, it's easy to think that talking about farts is immature.

  • But they're incredibly complicated. And by analysing them because they're funny,

  • you can accidentally learn a lot of science. Plus, we're in great company.

  • Mozart wrote songs and poems about flatuants and even Benjamin Franklin once wrote an essay

  • titled "Fart Proudly." So first things first - where do farts come

  • from? A lot of the gas that makes up a fart comes

  • from the outside, because you swallowed it. That's right, you swallow a lot of air when

  • swallowing spit or food or beverage. Now, some of this will come back up as a burp.

  • But if it doesn't, soon enough it will go deeper into your digestive system.

  • But it's where the other portion of the gas that makes up a fart comes from that makes

  • farts so unique. No two people's farts smell alike.

  • The pungent part of a fart is unique to you and it comes from things that are inside you

  • and are not you. Inside your intestines are completely separate

  • organisms, bacteria and microbes that digest food you haven't or can't.

  • Now these little guys have a great collective name - Gut Flora.

  • And, because they're so much smaller than the average human cell, their numbers are

  • staggering. Believe it or not, your body contains about

  • 10 trillion cells. But the number of bacteria and microorganisms

  • inside your intestines is nearly 100 trillion. As these microorganisms digest food that you

  • haven't or can't, they produce helpful things like vitamin K, but they also produce chemicals

  • that lead to the reason that farts smell. And we all fart, every day.

  • About a pint of fart every day. And if you say that you don't fart, you probably

  • release that gas when you're in the bathroom or at night when you're asleep and your muscles

  • are more relaxed. But if this amount of gas used to be inside

  • you and now it's not, that must mean that every time you fart you loose mass, you loose

  • weight. But how much weight?

  • Well, luckily, some researchers have already figured this out.

  • Assuming this average chemical make up of a fart, and with studies that have show what

  • is the typical volume of a fart, it can be calculated that the average fart weighs about 3

  • hundredths of a gram. And a part of it that actually stinks only

  • weighs 0.0008 grams. Okay, so a fart weighs 3 hundredths of a gram,

  • I mean, what does that really mean? Well, here's a fun way to think about it.

  • As you move further away from the centre of the Earth, the gravitational attraction between

  • the two of you decreases and your weight decreases. In fact, according to this fantastic book

  • about the scale of things, your weight decreases by about 0.5% for every 6 miles you are above

  • Earth. In fact, the average fart causes you to loose

  • an amount of weight equivalent to being about a third of an inch further from Earth.

  • The way your gut flora process the food that you eat and influence how your farts smell

  • was established within the first two to three months of your life.

  • When you're first born, your gastrointestinal track is completely sterile.

  • There are no microorganisms living in it. In fact, unlike the rest of your life, the

  • very first poop that you take is almost completely sterile.

  • It's so significant it has a special name - meconium.

  • Now, I will spare you any pictures, but if you ever wanna call someone a poop head, try instead

  • calling them a meconium head. It's like a poop head, but with no experience.

  • As soon as you leave your mother, you begin collecting microorganisms inside your digestive

  • system. In fact, within the first 5 to 10 minutes

  • of being born, the gut flora that you have are almost exactly equivalent to the microorganisms

  • living in your mother's birth canal. Now later, these microorganisms come from

  • your environment, especially from what you eat - milk or formula.

  • This early in your life, microorganisms train your immune system to not attack them and

  • so, within the first 2 or 3 months of your life, whatever microorganisms are there have

  • largely established themselves as the exact colonial make up of your gut flora for your

  • entire life. That's all cool, but how loud can a fart get?

  • Well, the Guinness Book of World Records doesn't know.

  • In fact, there are lot of records it doesn't keep, some of which it doesn't keep because

  • they're dangerous. For instance, speed drinking.

  • It's possible to open up your throat and literally pour a liquid straight down your esophagus

  • into your belly. But it is really dangerous and should never

  • be done by anybody. Now burping, they do have records of.

  • The world record for the largest burp belongs to Paul Hunn from the United Kingdom, whose

  • burp registered 109.9 decibels - about as loud as a car horn.

  • Oh and also, many of these microorganisms that live inside your gut and digest food

  • and make farts smell bad also create gases that are flammable.

  • We've also seen this and it is very very true. The Mythbusters even did an episode where

  • they prove that farts can be lit on fire, but the episode was deemed too gross and never

  • aired. Another thing you should know about farts

  • is that when you hold them in, many of the gases inside them will get reabsorbed back

  • into your bloodstream through the intestinal lumen.

  • Now, the smelly, stinky stuff doesn't travel this way, but the nutrients stuff, like oxygen,

  • will. And the bloodstream brings these gases back to the

  • lungs where you exhale them. So if you hold in your farts a lot, you, in

  • a way, will have literal fart breath. The Fitzroy River turtle does one better.

  • It can do what I like to call a reverse fart. Because it spends so much time under water,

  • it's developed a way to breathe through its butt.

  • It actually can get up to 68% of the oxygen it needs by simply opening up that cavity

  • and getting oxygen from the water. Finally, I want to leave you with the art

  • of the fart. The way your farts sound is determined by

  • their speed and the shape of their exit, but a select few can not only make themselves

  • create flatus on command, but can also modulate the pitch and tone of their farts.

  • These people are known as flatulists and one of the most famous right now is Mister Methane.

  • Amazing, right? Well, now that we've talked about farts, let's

  • move on to outer space, on YouTube.com/SpaceLab. Go over there now and you can ask me any question

  • about outer space that you want and every week, I will answer 3 of them.

  • So, what are you waiting for? Go check that out...

  • And as always,

  • thanks for watching.

Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. And today, we're going to talk about farts.

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