F=ma Memes

Posts tagged with F=ma

Which One Are You?

Which One Are You?
The eternal battle between pop culture nerds and science nerds captured in one perfect SNL moment. On one side, we have the "May the Force be with you" Star Wars fanatic, and on the other, the physics enthusiast who can't help but point out that Force = mass × acceleration (Newton's Second Law). Both are technically correct about "the Force," just in completely different universes. I'm definitely the one silently judging both of them while calculating the statistical probability of this conversation occurring at a party.

Physics For Absolute Beginners (Very Beginners)

Physics For Absolute Beginners (Very Beginners)
Newton's second law just got the elementary school treatment! Someone decided to explain F=ma like they're teaching multiplication to third graders who've never seen physics before. The hilarious part is labeling multiplication as an "Advanced 3rd grade operator" while simultaneously butchering the definition of acceleration. Apparently acceleration is now "Distance divided by seconds squared" instead of the rate of change in velocity. This is what happens when you ask ChatGPT to explain physics after training it exclusively on elementary school textbooks. Next up: E=mc² explained with macaroni art and glitter!

Deep Breaths (Before The Physics Breakdown)

Deep Breaths (Before The Physics Breakdown)
Newton's Second Law (F=ma) is literally the foundation of classical mechanics, and yet some students still manage to scramble these variables like they're playing physics Boggle. The Kermit meme perfectly captures that moment when your tutoring session turns into an existential crisis. You've explained it fourteen different ways, drawn three diagrams, and they're still asking if "a" stands for amperes. At that point, divine intervention seems like the only option left. Physics tutors everywhere are nodding in silent solidarity right now.

We Did It, Boys. Air Resistance Is No More

We Did It, Boys. Air Resistance Is No More
The cat's existential crisis when it realizes physics problems aren't just theoretical! While textbooks confidently declare "ignore air resistance" to make equations manageable, this feline has seen the truth. Newton's F=ma looks great on paper until you're watching a dog disappear into thin air. The cat's wide-eyed terror is every physics student who finally understood that simplified classroom problems don't prepare you for the chaotic reality where air resistance absolutely refuses to be ignored. That moment when you realize your entire physics education was built on convenient lies!

Conservation Of Momentum Be Like

Conservation Of Momentum Be Like
The classic Scooby-Doo mask reveal just got a physics upgrade! First, Fred tries to unmask the "ghost" with that terrifying Navier-Stokes equation for fluid momentum—basically the physics equivalent of trying to solve a Rubik's cube blindfolded underwater. But when he pulls off the mask, what's underneath? Just good ol' F=ma! Newton's Second Law was hiding there all along, proving that behind every scary-looking conservation of momentum equation is just a simple force equals mass times acceleration relationship. The universe's way of saying "I would've gotten away with it too, if it weren't for you meddling simplifications!"

When Worlds Collide: Newton Vs. Star Wars

When Worlds Collide: Newton Vs. Star Wars
Newton meets Star Wars in the ultimate nerd crossover! The first guy starts with "May the Force be—" expecting the classic Star Wars line, but the second guy immediately pivots to "equal to mass times acceleration." That's Newton's Second Law (F=ma) instead of "May the Force be with you." It's that perfect moment when sci-fi fandom collides with hardcore physics knowledge. Two wildly different flavors of nerddom existing in the same space-time continuum. The look of confusion on the first guy's face is basically every humanities major who accidentally wandered into an engineering lecture.

How Mech Es And Aeros See Civies

How Mech Es And Aeros See Civies
The engineering hierarchy in its natural habitat. Mechanical and aerospace engineers pretending civil engineers don't exist, while simultaneously terrorizing them with Newton's Second Law. F=ma≠0 is apparently the engineering equivalent of showing a horror movie to a toddler. Meanwhile, civil engineers are just trying to build bridges without getting bullied about their fear of moving objects. Classic STEM food chain dynamics.