Fabulous article by hound and the found

How Scent and Airflow Works.

rattlerjen

 rattlerjen9 years ago

How do those dogs find missing people?

Remember PigPen from Charlie Brown?  He always appeared to have clouds of dust coming off of him wherever he went.  This is not far from the truth.

You have thousands of tiny pieces of your body leaving you every minute; 40,000 pieces to be exact.  These tiny cornflake like bits are called rafts.

They are made up of skin cells, hygiene products, bacteria, fungus, parasites, sweat, hormones, and enzymes. They are unique to each individual human.  Even skin rafts from identical twins are different.  These are what dogs smell.

Some skin rafts are lighter in air, easily carried by air currents.  Others are heavier than air,  alighting on vegetation or falling to the ground.

Dog Handlers pay attention to air currents.

Skin rafts are carried along currents of air like millions of fluffy dandelion seeds.

We pay attention to physics.  Warm Air rises

and Cool air sinks.  Cold and moisture make air heavier. Your skin rafts first leave your body at about 2mph up in the air traveling along the current of air your 98.6 degree F produces.

Without any air movement

scent diffuses evenly

Diffusion

But of course, there is always something making air move.

When things are perfect, scent moves predictably like this:

Laminar Flow

Objects and other factors often cause air to move like this:

Turbulent Air Flow

Turbulent air flow causes handlers and their canines to mutter choice words under their breaths.

Different Types of Airflow

Normal Daytime Air

When the ground heats up during the day time, air begins to rise.

Normal Nighttime Air

When the ground begins to cool, air cools and begins to fall. It flows downhill like water.

Coning Plumes

  • movement of scent from subject downwind in the shape of a cone
  • during cloud covered days or nights
  • travels long distances
  • ideal for dogs

A dog will run perpendicular to the flow of the scent crossing in and out of the scent cone zeroing in to its source.

Fumigating Scent

  • occurs in the morning before sunup
  • scents travel down valleys like water
  • subjects on a hill can be detected by dog down below
  • It is good to get dogs out before sunrise

Lofting Scent

  • Occurs after sun sets
  • The ground is cooling but aloft air is still warm
  • usually occurs in valleys first then other areas later on
  • Work dogs on the high ground in the evening

Fanning Plumes

  • at night in stable air
  • scent holds at the same elevation level without falling or rising
  • dog may alert across a drainage or canyon at the same level, but can’t find a person
  • Be sure to report your alerts as scent can carry

Pooling Scent

  • collects in an area like a pool of water
  • usually occurs in a low area
  • Occurs where there is little dispersal of scent by the wind
  • It hard for dog to follow a scent pool to the subject

Eddying Scent

  • circular air forms behind an object (turbulence)
  • prevents scent from traveling along prevailing wind
  • example: eddies form at a line of trees next to an open field

Looping Plumes

  • Occurs in clear sky or with high clouds
  • Occurs at midday, a high convection situation
  • scent rises, cools, falls, heats up, rises, cools, falls, etc.
  • Dog will alert by putting his head up, but will lose the scent.

Chimney Effect

  • Happens when air currents move straight up an object
  • alerts may occur nearby   -but-
  • scent may come down as much as several hundred meters away from the subject
  • This makes it nearly impossible for the dog to find the subject
  • You should check around tall objects in the area

Thermoclines

  • caused by significant temperature and humidity differences in short distances
  • changes in elevation
  • drastic changes in shade and sunny spots
  • creates a wall like barrier of scent

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