Impossible physics Memes

Posts tagged with Impossible physics

The Guy Hitting It Must Be Jacked

The Guy Hitting It Must Be Jacked
Physics textbooks: casually asking if you've witnessed objects traveling at 158 times the speed of sound like it's a normal Tuesday activity. For context, Mach 158 is approximately 121,000 mph or 54 kilometers per second . At that speed, a golf ball would circle the Earth in about 12 minutes and have enough kinetic energy to level a small city. The textbook's follow-up question is basically asking "Would you like to experience a thermonuclear explosion with a side of atmospheric reentry burns?" Sure, right after I finish my coffee.

Well, For Starters...

Well, For Starters...
The ultimate physics crime spree. Each of these "illegal" activities violates fundamental laws of physics that keep our universe functioning properly. An object moving at the speed of light with mass would require infinite energy. Perpetual motion machines violate thermodynamics. Heisenberg's uncertainty principle explicitly forbids knowing both position and momentum precisely. Entropy always increases, so broken eggs don't spontaneously reassemble. Black hole event horizons are one-way tickets. And quantum tunneling works for particles, not people—unless you enjoy being a probability wave function. The physics police would definitely put you away for life for these violations.

Physics Professor's Existential Crisis

Physics Professor's Existential Crisis
The professor's soul is visibly leaving his body upon seeing a car with negative mass traveling faster than light. Nothing triggers physics professors quite like answers that violate the fundamental laws of the universe. A negative mass would require exotic matter we haven't discovered, and exceeding light speed would break causality itself. The student might as well have written "the car runs on unicorn tears and time-travels on Tuesdays" for all the physical sense it makes. That expression is the exact moment when the professor realizes those weekend review sessions were completely pointless.

The Bootstrap Flying Paradox

The Bootstrap Flying Paradox
Childhood physics debates are where true scientific innovation begins. This masterpiece explores the classic "pull yourself up by your bootstraps" fallacy that every physicist has contemplated at age 8. The stick figure's flawless plan to defeat Newton's Third Law involves standing on a plank, lifting said plank, and achieving flight through sheer logical oversight. Conservation of momentum sends its regards. Somewhere, a physics professor is using this as an exam question while muttering "this is why we can't have nice things."