Exam-questions Memes

Posts tagged with Exam-questions

When Engineering Problems Get Dark

When Engineering Problems Get Dark
Engineering professors really know how to rip your heart out with those example problems! One minute you're calculating transformer loads, the next you're visualizing a puppy slaughterhouse powered by 1500 kVA. Nothing says "I'm prepared for the real world" like solving power factor triangles while emotionally scarred. The professor probably thinks they're being "practical" with "real-world applications," but c'mon—couldn't they have picked literally ANY other industry? Even a nuclear weapons facility would feel less disturbing. Electrical engineering: where the math is complex but the emotional damage is very, very real.

Why SHE Is Coated In Black (Pt)

Why SHE Is Coated In Black (Pt)
Chemistry exam questions getting weirdly personal about platinum! The question is about why SHE (Standard Hydrogen Electrode) is coated with black platinum - it's to increase surface area and roughness for better catalytic activity. But written this way, it sounds like someone's gossiping about a woman's fashion choices! Chemistry professors sneaking in dad jokes since the dawn of periodic tables. Next question: "Why does Na never text back? Too reactive in relationships!"

Physics Coffee: When Tension Becomes Torture

Physics Coffee: When Tension Becomes Torture
Newton's third law has entered the chat! This brilliant tension-based paradox is exactly what physics professors dream up at night. The table appears to be supported by buckets resting on it, but those same buckets are suspended from the ceiling by strings attached to the table itself. It's a closed system of forces that shouldn't work—yet there it hangs, mocking our intuition. Students would need to analyze the tension forces, weight distribution, and structural integrity to explain why this setup doesn't immediately crash to the floor. The real genius is how it perfectly captures that sadistic joy professors feel when crafting problems that make students question reality itself.