The famous smoke from a chimney to indicate whether cardinals locked
away in the Sistine Chapel have elected a pope is not created just by
burning used ballots, the Vatican said Tuesday.
“We use smoke flares,” Paolo Sagretti, who was in charge of setting up the chapel for the election conclave, told AFP.
The ancient signalling system — still the only way the public learns
whether a pope has been elected — used to involve mixing wet straw with
the ballots to produce white smoke, and pitch to create black smoke.
After several episodes in which greyish smoke that could be
interpreted as white or black created confusion, the Vatican introduced
the surer system starting with the last conclave in 2005.
The Vatican now uses a mixture of potassium perchlorate, anthracene
and sulphur to produce black smoke and potassium chlorate, lactose and
rosin for white, the Vatican says on its website.
Two stoves stand in a corner of the chapel, one for burning the
ballots and the other for the chemicals, with the smoke from both stoves
going up a common flue.
An electronic control panel allows the choice between the two, and
the correct compound is burned at the same time as the used ballots.
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