The
fumata nera ("black smoke" in
Italian) is the announcement to the outer world by a
conclave that a
Papal election wasn't decisive, by means of burning the ballots together with straw or chemicals to produce black smoke. A
fumata bianca ("white smoke") announces the conclave is over because a Pope was elected. Both terms have permeated into Italian culture as
political and
journalistic jargon for, respectively, "non-decisive vote" and "final, decisive vote", and are widely
(ab)used by the press.