hivesaeed4 said:
The reason why I thought smoke would be coming out of the brain due to neurons is that I thought of an electrical circuit (analagous to neurons) which when overheated (or a massive amount of electricity flows through it) starts giving off smoke. Anyway thanks for pinpoointing the real reason behind the appearance of smoke after electrocution.
A further question. Why does smoke only come from the head? Is it because in the rest of the body water is found in liquid form whereas in the head it is also found in gaseous form?
I conjectured that it is steam, not smoke. The water in the body is boiling. Hence, water vapor under great pressure is forming in the body. When the water vapor escapes, you have steam.
A good analogy here would be between the human skull and a tea kettle. There is water, air and a little organic matter inside the tea kettle. You place it on a stove and heat it. To strengthen the analogy, make it an electric stove. Heat the water and steam comes out of the holes. There are no neurons in the tea.
Or maybe a better analogy would be a vaporizer sometimes used to relieve colds. A container is filled with water, salt and a medicine with a low vapor pressure. An electric current passes through the solution. It heats up. Steam with vaporized medication spurts out a small hole in the container. There are no neurons in the container.
The mist coming out of the ears is probably not smoke. The generation of smoke would require combustion, which requires oxygen. Where there is smoke there is fire. However, there is no fire in the cranium. There aren't many air pockets within the cranium. The nasal sinuses contain some air. So maybe there is some smoke generated in the sinuses. However, the mass of water far exceeds the mass of air in the skull. When that water comes to boil, the pressure of water vapor must be large. Imagine the bubbles in the brain caused by all that boiling blood. The ambient air pressure (i.e, outside the skull) is just atmospheric pressure.
The reason it comes out of the head is that this is where most of the apertures in the body are located there. The high pressure water vapor can't break through the skull, because it is so hard. So it comes out of the small apertures. The only apertures that show are the ears.
Note that all the body fluids are electrolytic solutions. Therefore, the fluids conduct electricity. Basically, the human body is a bag containing salt water. So the electricity has an almost straight line path from electrode to electrode.
The neurons are more like tiny batteries than electric wires. The generate voltages between points on the surface of the brain are on the order of millivolts (i.e., 1mV = 1/1000 volt). The potential difference in an electric chair is at least 500 V. Therefore, the electric fields generated by the neurons are negligible compared to the electric fields produced by the chair electrodes.