Fat Globule Size in Homogenized Milk
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Question (English)
The size of fat globule in homogenized milk is:
- 2 µm ✓ Correct
- 3 µm
- 4 µm
- 5 µm
Correct Answer: 2 µm
After homogenization, the fat globule size in milk is reduced to 2 micrometres (2 µm) or less. This makes the emulsion extremely stable and prevents cream from rising to the top.
Homogenization
Homogenization is the process of making a stable emulsion of milk serum and milk fat by forcing milk through a tiny orifice under high pressure (homogenizer). This breaks large fat globules into uniformly small ones.
Effects of Homogenization
- Fat globule size reduced to ≤2 µm (from normal 2–5 µm).
- Cream does NOT rise (no cream line) — stable emulsion.
- Viscosity increases after homogenization (more surface area of fat globules).
- Cannot separate cream from homogenized milk by gravity.
- Milk appears whiter due to greater light scattering by smaller globules.
- More digestible — smaller fat globules are easier to digest.
Normal Fat Globule Size
In normal (non-homogenized) milk: average 2–5 µm; range 0–10 µm.
Why Other Options Are Wrong
- 3, 4, 5 µm → these are within the normal (pre-homogenization) range. After homogenization, size is specifically reduced to 2 µm or below.
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This multiple choice question is from Animal Refresher, Dairy Science. It has 4 options with a detailed explanation of the correct answer. Practice more MCQs from Animal Refresher to strengthen your preparation.