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08-31-2007, 05:24 PM #1OPSenior Member
Nice to know scientists are working to answer the most important questions...
Does Carbonation Have Flavor? - Yahoo! News
If you ask a fruit fly, the answer is an emphatic "yes!"
In a study in today's issue of the journal Nature, scientists found that fruit flies are attracted to the taste of carbon dioxide dissolved in water, or what we commonly call the fizz in soda.
The fruit flies use their nosy ability to find food in your kitchen, of course. Yeast and bacteria both produce carbon dioxide (CO2) when they feast, and the chemical dissolves readily in water.
A little moisture, some rotting fruit, and, well, you know what happens next.
Exactly how the flies discern which fruit to go after is not entirely known, but neurobiologist Kristin Scott of the University of California at Berkeley thinks it goes like this:
"Flies seek the right amount of rottenness," Scott explained. "If fruit is only half rotten, producing a little CO2, it's good; if too rotten, it gives off a lot of CO2 and is bad tasting. They seek a balance."
And it might be that humans can taste it, too. See, fruit flies contain similar versions of many human genes. That's why scientists study them so much.
"This research raises the question of whether people also may have the ability to taste carbon dioxide and perhaps other chemicals in food," said study team member James F. Battey of the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. "If this were found to be true, our sense of taste could be even more complex than we realize."
Currently, scientists recognize five tastes in humans: sweet, salty, bitter, sour, and umami (also called savory; it's the taste of glutamate). And there is considerable debate about the existence of a sixth taste receptor for fat, too.slipknotpsycho Reviewed by slipknotpsycho on . Nice to know scientists are working to answer the most important questions... Does Carbonation Have Flavor? - Yahoo! News Rating: 5
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08-31-2007, 06:16 PM #2Senior Member
Nice to know scientists are working to answer the most important questions...
That actually makes sense. Carbonated water really does seem to taste different than regular water. I can't stand the taste of it. Soda also seems to taste worse when it's flat.
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08-31-2007, 06:42 PM #3Senior Member
Nice to know scientists are working to answer the most important questions...
I always wondered if carbonation had color, that off-set the "real" color of Ginger Ale.
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08-31-2007, 06:48 PM #4Senior Member
Nice to know scientists are working to answer the most important questions...
Carbonated water tastes sour. We don't actally taste the CO2, but once in water, CO2 become H2CO3 which is an acid.
All acids taste sour, H2CO3 is no exception.
Simple as this really.all posts under this user name are purely for role playing purposes
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08-31-2007, 06:53 PM #5Senior Member
Nice to know scientists are working to answer the most important questions...
If Scientists only studied certain things or what we only thought to be beneficial we wouldn't know half of what we know.
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