Random Memes

Back navigation is broken on this page because of the randomness - it's a feature, not a bug! So save your post before navigating back to this page lol, coz it ain't gonna remember your scroll position.

Kirchhoff Was Wildin'

Kirchhoff Was Wildin'
The eternal struggle between theoretical physics and practical engineering! While physicists obsess over electron flow direction (negative to positive, contrary to conventional current that flows positive to negative), electrical engineers are just like "does the circuit work? cool." The convention was established before we knew electrons were negative, and now we're stuck with this delightful contradiction. Kirchhoff probably rolls in his grave every time an engineer shrugs off the discrepancy while successfully building something that works anyway. Physics purists in shambles!

Decay Facts

Decay Facts
The cat's expression perfectly captures the existential crisis of nuclear physics. Bismuth-209 has a half-life of 20 quintillion years—longer than the universe has existed—yet it still decays into Thallium-205. That's like waiting your entire life for a package delivery only to find out it's bills. The universe's most patient radioactive transformation, and this cat just witnessed it in real-time. No wonder it looks traumatized.

Keep Calm And Apply Kirchhoff's Law

Keep Calm And Apply Kirchhoff's Law
That power grid is what happens when you let your undergrads design the circuit lab. Kirchhoff's Law states that the sum of currents entering a junction equals the sum leaving it—but good luck finding a junction in that electrical nightmare. Even the electrons are looking at this mess saying "nope, I quit." The irony of seeing "Keep Calm" above what's essentially a visual representation of entropy having a mental breakdown is just *chef's kiss*. If your electrical engineer friend doesn't break into a cold sweat looking at this, they're either lying or haven't passed their boards yet.

When Math Purists Meet Engineering Shortcuts

When Math Purists Meet Engineering Shortcuts
Pure mathematicians hearing engineers simplify trigonometry be like... *suspicious newspaper reading intensifies* 📰👀 The small angle approximation (where sin θ ≈ tan θ ≈ θ for tiny angles) is the engineering equivalent of saying "close enough!" while mathematicians silently judge your casual relationship with precision. It's the mathematical version of "eh, good enough for government work." Tom the cat perfectly captures that moment when you realize some people are willing to commit mathematical crimes in broad daylight and sleep soundly at night. The horror!

How To Complicate A Simple Exercise:

How To Complicate A Simple Exercise:

Ours Is Better! (180% Better, Actually)

Ours Is Better! (180% Better, Actually)
Breaking the laws of chemistry is just another Tuesday for the superior lab group! 180% yield? Pfft, that's not an error—that's innovation ! Either you've discovered a magical reaction that creates matter from nothing, or someone's been a bit too generous with their weighing scale. Nothing says "I'm a chemistry wizard" quite like yields that defy the conservation of mass! Next week's goal: 250% yield and a Nobel Prize for bending reality!

Shoutout To My Fellow German Chemists

Shoutout To My Fellow German Chemists
The German approach to fuel naming is peak scientific precision! While Americans casually call it "gas" (despite being a liquid) and Brits say "petrol" (at least acknowledging petroleum), German chemists cut straight to the molecular structure—benzene ring FTW! That C₆H₆ aromatic hydrocarbon structure isn't just elegant chemistry—it's linguistic efficiency. Nothing says "I understand organic chemistry" like referring to your fuel by its actual molecular structure instead of some vague colloquialism. German precision strikes again!

3 Ways To Write A Divided By B: The Mathematical Spider-Verse

3 Ways To Write A Divided By B: The Mathematical Spider-Verse
Mathematical notation wars are the ultimate nerd battlefield! Each Spider-Man represents a different mathematical notation for division: the classic fraction (a/b), the old-school colon (a:b), and the vintage obelus (a÷b). Your preferred notation probably reveals your academic upbringing—European mathematicians often favor the colon, while American textbooks worship the obelus and fraction bar. The fraction gang will argue it's clearest for algebraic manipulation, the colon crew insists it's elegant for ratios, and the obelus squad just wants to use that fancy division symbol they memorized in elementary school. Next time you're dividing, remember you're taking a stance in this silent mathematical civil war!

PV = n(Aww)T: The Ideal Relationship Equation

PV = n(Aww)T: The Ideal Relationship Equation
The perfect physics pickup line doesn't exi— 😍 When your partner whispers "assume ideal gas" instead of "I love you," that's when you know you've found your thermodynamic soulmate! The title "PV = n(Aww)T" is a brilliant play on the ideal gas equation PV = nRT, where the universal gas constant R has been replaced with "Aww" – because romance and science are perfectly compatible state functions! Nothing says "I'm under pressure to express my feelings" quite like invoking the assumptions that particles have negligible volume and perfectly elastic collisions. Talk about relationship goals! 💕🔬

Americans Will Use Anything But The Metric System

Americans Will Use Anything But The Metric System
Only in America would you measure wood in "3/4 inch" instead of millimeters! The irony is delicious—a country that sent humans to the moon with NASA's calculations (done in metric, btw) but can't seem to handle the simplicity of base-10 measurements for everyday life. Meanwhile, the entire rest of the planet is like "19mm? Cool, got it." But no, Americans need their fractions on plywood because apparently decimal points are terrifying. It's like they're allergic to easy conversion! Next they'll be measuring kitchen counters in "football fields divided by hamburgers."

The Sum Of My Fears

The Sum Of My Fears
The punchline here is a mathematical pun that would make Gauss roll in his grave. The sum of integers from 1 to 100 is actually 5,050 (calculated using the formula n(n+1)/2). But our protagonist interpreted "50-50" as odds or probability, essentially saying "it's a coin flip whether I can do this calculation." The irony being they accidentally gave the correct first two digits while completely missing the point. This is what happens when you skip arithmetic day.

Terra Reigns Supreme

Terra Reigns Supreme
The cosmic beauty pageant statistics are in! Earth is absolutely crushing the competition with 71 Miss Universe titles, while the rest of the known universe remains at a disappointing zero. Turns out our little blue marble has an unfair advantage—it's the only planet we know of with humans to host such competitions. The supernova on the right might be spectacular with its dazzling light show, but sadly lacks the organizational skills to establish a pageant committee. Cosmic irony at its finest: we named the contest "Miss Universe" while limiting contestants to a tiny speck in an incomprehensibly vast cosmos. Talk about home-planet bias!