Physics Memes

Physics: where falling apples lead to revolutionary theories and cats can be simultaneously dead and alive. These memes celebrate the science of making simple things complicated and complicated things incomprehensible. If you've ever tried explaining quantum mechanics at a party (and watched everyone suddenly need a drink refill), calculated how long it would take to fall through the Earth just for fun, or felt unreasonably angry when someone confuses velocity with acceleration, you'll find your fellow physics enthusiasts here. From the special horror of realizing you forgot to convert to SI units to the pure joy of an elegant derivation, ScienceHumor.io's physics collection captures the beautiful absurdity of trying to describe the universe with math while your experimental values refuse to match the theoretical predictions.

The Evolution Of Mechanics

The Evolution Of Mechanics
From theoretical brilliance to "Hey buddy, can you check my transmission?" The evolution of mechanics takes an unexpected turn! Newton gave us forces, Lagrange reformulated with energy, Hamilton made it even more abstract with his fancy mathematical approach... and then there's Bob and Steve under your car. Physics purists might need a moment to recover from that punchline. Next time your car breaks down, just tell the mechanic you prefer a Hamiltonian approach to your oil change.

How To Reach This Level In Physics?

How To Reach This Level In Physics?
The meme plays on the double meaning of "physics" - referring both to the academic discipline and physical fitness. The person in the chair has an impossibly muscular physique that defies normal human anatomy (hence the physics joke). The comeback is equally savage, suggesting this unrealistic body standard is likely the result of genetic inheritance rather than achievable through normal means. It's basically the scientific equivalent of "I'm studying physics by bench-pressing textbooks instead of reading them."

Watt Is The Unit Of Electrical Power

Watt Is The Unit Of Electrical Power
Classic case of scientific miscommunication in the wild. One guy is asking for the unit of electrical power (which is indeed the watt, named after James Watt). The other guy keeps answering "watt" but the first guy thinks he's saying "what?" and gets progressively more enraged. This is basically every lab meeting I've ever attended. The number of physics jokes that rely on unit puns is directly proportional to how long we've been stuck in the lab without sunlight.

The Cat Strikes Back

The Cat Strikes Back
The ultimate physicist's revenge fantasy! Schrödinger creates a thought experiment about a cat in a quantum superposition state, and now the cat is demanding a retraction of this fake quote. Imagine spending eternity as the poster child for quantum uncertainty, only to find yourself simultaneously famous AND misquoted. The cat's expression screams "I'm both offended and not offended until you observe my reaction." Even in the multiverse, no version of Schrödinger regretted meeting that cat—the thought experiment made him immortal in physics textbooks. Though I suspect in at least one universe, the cat got its revenge by putting Schrödinger in a box with a radioactive atom...

Nuclear Power's Cosmic Flex

Nuclear Power's Cosmic Flex
Nuclear energy enthusiasts casually dropping mind-blowing facts while sipping coffee. The meme brilliantly highlights how uranium and thorium will still be vibing and splitting atoms long after our sun becomes a sad cosmic memory. With half-lives measured in billions of years (uranium-238 at ~4.5 billion years, thorium-232 at ~14 billion years), these elements are playing the ultra-long game while being more common than tin. It's the ultimate mic drop for nuclear power advocates: technically, fission could be considered "renewable" since these elements will outlast our solar system. The sun will expand into a red giant and swallow Earth in about 5 billion years, but uranium and thorium will just be like "We're still here, what's the rush?"

Hermitian Crab

Hermitian Crab
The mathematical pun here is exquisite. In quantum mechanics, a Hermitian operator equals its own conjugate transpose—essentially identical to itself when flipped. Similarly, this hermit crab equals... itself. The dagger symbol (†) represents the conjugate transpose operation, and the equal sign confirms our suspicion: this crustacean is indeed Hermitian. Eigenvalue problems just got significantly more adorable.

More Than Meets The Equation

More Than Meets The Equation
When two people meet and discover they both love "transformers," but one's thinking of robots in disguise while the other's contemplating mathematical functions that map vector spaces. The equations shown (Q n , K h , V h , and a nm ) are from attention mechanisms in machine learning transformers - the architecture powering modern AI systems like ChatGPT. Meanwhile, Optimus Prime is busy saving the world from Decepticons. Dating tip for mathematicians: specify which transformers you're excited about. Saves awkward moments when you start explaining self-attention matrices and they were expecting discussions about Bumblebee.

The Great Equalizer: Physics Edition

The Great Equalizer: Physics Edition
Physics textbooks don't discriminate when it comes to destroying souls! That chapter on rotational motion has a special talent for making everyone feel equally incompetent. One minute you're confidently solving linear motion problems, the next you're staring at angular momentum equations wondering if you should've majored in art history instead. The universal struggle of watching your GPA spiral downward with each rotation... it's basically Newton's fourth law at this point.

Bro When I Send Him To The Tachyon Dimension

Bro When I Send Him To The Tachyon Dimension
The classic "I'm tough" facade crumbles faster than quantum coherence when someone gets yeeted into the tachyon dimension. The chart shows our measly 3+1 spacetime ("we are here") versus the forbidden "tachyons only" zone where physics breaks down completely. Theoretical physicists have nightmares about this chart. Those hypothetical tachyon particles move faster than light, meaning they'd experience time backwards. So your friend isn't just destroyed - he's probably experiencing his own birth right now. Brutal.

Schrödinger Equation As A Facebook Math Problem

Schrödinger Equation As A Facebook Math Problem
Those Facebook math puzzles just got a quantum upgrade! Instead of solving for cute fruits, you're now solving the Schrödinger equation—the fundamental equation describing how quantum particles behave. The strawberry represents the kinetic energy term (with that fancy Laplacian operator), the lemon is the potential energy function, and the blueberry is the time evolution term. Put them together and you've got the complete equation that describes everything from electrons to atoms! Next time someone posts "only geniuses can solve this," hit 'em with some wave function collapse probability distributions instead.

The Example We Would Have Got If Schrödinger Was A Dog Person

The Example We Would Have Got If Schrödinger Was A Dog Person
Instead of putting cats in boxes, Schrödinger could've saved himself a lot of trouble with this doggo! The meme brilliantly illustrates quantum superposition—where particles exist in multiple states simultaneously until observed—but with a goodest boy instead of subatomic particles. This white dog is in a hilarious position where it's technically sitting (butt on bench), standing (paws on ground), and laying down (body horizontal) all at once. It's basically the canine equivalent of an electron that can't make up its mind. The dog collapsed its own wave function without needing a fancy experiment! Physics professors everywhere are frantically updating their lecture slides right now.

Where Is Dx, I Am Scared

Where Is Dx, I Am Scared
The calculus student's nightmare in mathematical form! This equation is missing the dreaded "dx" term needed to complete the integral. It's like showing up to the final exam and realizing you forgot your calculator, pants, and will to live. The equation itself is some physics monstrosity involving magnetic permeability (μ₀) and what appears to be a force calculation, but without that crucial "dx" differential element, it's mathematically incomplete. Just like my coffee mug that says "I differentiate, therefore I integrate... usually."