What Causes the Air to Smell Nice After it Rains?

May 29, 2021

Rain showers with lightning.

It’s a smell that anyone with a working olfactory system will immediately recognize, the scent of fresh rain. What happens after a new rainstorm to make the air smell so pleasant? It all comes down to plants and a little chemistry.

The pleasant odor after a rain is called “petrichor.” It comes from the Greek words “petra,” which means “stone,” and “ichor,” which was the fluid that flowed in the veins of the mythological Greek gods. The term was first used by a pair of Australian scientists in 1964 as they studied the odor after a rain.

The scientists discovered that during a dry period, certain plants secrete oils that are absorbed into the soil and rocks. When the first rainstorm comes along after one of these prolonged dry periods, the oils are released into the air and combine with a substance called geosmin. This is a chemical produced by a soil bacteria called actinomycetes when it’s producing spores. This creates the scent of petrichor, but how does the scent get into the air after a storm?

MIT scientists in 2015 used high-speed cameras to determine how the scent got into the air. When a raindrop lands on a porous surface, it traps tiny areas of air in the raindrop. These air pockets travel up and burst from the drop’s surface, releasing microscopic particles called aerosols. It’s believed these aerosols, when dispersed by the wind, are what enable us to smell the pleasant odor after a rain.

But that’s not the end of the smelly story. Lightning can split oxygen and nitrogen molecules during a thunderstorm, and these molecules will commonly form into nitric oxide. Nitric oxide then combines with other chemicals to form ozone, another odor you can smell in the air.

Why do we find this particular odor so pleasing then? It may come down to evolution. The hypothesis by scientists is that the smell after a rain shower has been passed down by our ancestors, who relied on the signal for rain to survive. Plants grew, and animals were healthy when it rained, which allowed people to eat. This association may have been hardwired into our brains. Now think about that the next time you get a good whiff of petrichor.

Sources: Smithsonian Magazine, Wikipedia, Live Science (1), Live Science (2)

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Daniel Ganninger - The writer, editor, and chief lackey of Knowledge Stew, the author of the Knowledge Stew line of trivia books, and editor of Fact World and the Knowledge Stew sister site on Medium, our ad-free subscription sites (you can find out how to join below). I hope you find things here to annoy those around you with your new found knowledge.

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