Random Memes

Chosen by rolling actual dice in the lab

Bacteria: Invincible In Nature, Drama Queens In Lab

Bacteria: Invincible In Nature, Drama Queens In Lab
Ever notice how bacteria have a split personality disorder? In nature, they're practically immortal supervillains—munching on dirt, surviving nuclear wastelands, and casually outlasting entire branches of the evolutionary tree. Meanwhile, the same microbes in our sterile labs turn into whiny prima donnas if their glucose concentration is 0.05% off or if someone breathed near the culture. The microbiology paradox that makes researchers question their career choices daily. And yes, I've definitely had grad students cry because their bacteria died from "tap water contamination" when we all know they just forgot to autoclave properly.

Schrödinger's Sassy Cat

Schrödinger's Sassy Cat
Whoever drew this whiteboard masterpiece deserves a Nobel Prize in comedy! It's Schrödinger's famous thought experiment but with the cat fighting back. The cat is simultaneously alive, dead, and apparently fluent in quantum mechanics equations telling Schrödinger to "shut up" in mathematical notation. The poor physicist just wanted to explain quantum superposition, and now he's getting sass from a hypothetical feline. That's what happens when you theoretically trap someone in a box with radioactive material - they develop an attitude and advanced physics knowledge. Revenge is best served with complex wave functions!

Kinda Cool Mathematical Coincidence

Kinda Cool Mathematical Coincidence
The square root of a sum of cubes equals the sum of the numbers? That's the mathematical equivalent of finding out your crush likes you back. Suspiciously convenient, yet deeply satisfying. This pattern where √(1³+2³) = 1+2, √(1³+2³+3³) = 1+2+3, and so on, is one of those rare mathematical gems that makes you wonder if the universe is just messing with us. It's like the math gods threw us a bone after torturing us with integration by parts. Thirty years of teaching and I still get a tiny dopamine hit when I see elegant patterns like this. Not that I'd ever admit that to my students.

Radiation Types, SpongeBob Styles

Radiation Types, SpongeBob Styles
Behold! The perfect visual representation of radiation penetration powers using our favorite porous yellow friend! 🧪 Alpha radiation (α) is basically the drama queen of the radiation world - all bark, no bite! Stopped by a sheet of paper or even your skin, just like SpongeBob having a complete meltdown over something trivial. Beta radiation (β) is that middle-child energy - penetrates a bit deeper through aluminum or thin materials, represented by our square friend looking somewhat... rectangular and ghostly? The radiation equivalent of "I'm kinda dangerous but not THAT dangerous." Gamma radiation (γ) is the absolute BEAST that requires lead shielding or thick concrete to stop. Just like SpongeBob casually chilling in that bizarre underwater scene - unbothered, unstoppable, and frankly terrifying if you understand the implications! It's basically the cockroach of the radiation family - NOTHING KILLS IT!

I Got That .Dwg In Me

I Got That .Dwg In Me
When engineers say they put their heart into their work, they mean it literally! This meme is playing with the file extension ".dwg" which is used for AutoCAD drawings—the bread and butter of mechanical engineers everywhere. Instead of having normal human organs, this person's got technical blueprints where their stomach should be! It's like their body runs on engineering specs instead of food. Next time your engineer friend says they're "built different," maybe check if they've got schematics instead of a digestive system!

Quantum Chemistry In Bikini Bottom

Quantum Chemistry In Bikini Bottom
Chemistry pickup lines have reached Bikini Bottom! The joke here is a delicious play on electron orbitals. You see, dz² orbitals have a distinctive donut shape with two lobes—much like Squidward's anatomy! So when someone says they're "only into dz² orbitals," they're basically saying they have a thing for Squidward's body type. It's quantum attraction at its finest! Chemists everywhere are snorting into their Erlenmeyer flasks right now.

Elements Alignment Chart

Elements Alignment Chart
Behold the periodic table alignment chart we never knew we needed! This clever meme maps chemical elements to character archetypes based on narrative presentation versus actual behavior. Carbon (C) is the true hero - presented as one and actually is one. Makes sense since carbon forms the backbone of all life on Earth. What a showoff. Hydrogen (H) talks a big hero game but is morally ambiguous - will bond with almost anything and can literally explode when provoked. Oxygen (O) is the ultimate two-faced element - presented as life-giving but is actually corroding metals, causing oxidative stress, and slowly killing us all. Trust issues much? Nitrogen (N) is the quiet, misunderstood type - seems sketchy but is actually essential for proteins and DNA. Classic redemption arc. Argon (Ar) is truly neutral - doesn't react with anyone and minds its own business. The Switzerland of elements. Fluorine (F) is accurately portrayed as morally questionable - it's so reactive it will steal electrons from practically anything. The kleptomaniac of the periodic table. Phosphorus (P), Sulfur (S), and Arsenic (As) round out the villain row - with Arsenic being the honest villain (yes, it will poison you), while Phosphorus is the misunderstood villain (essential for life but can be weaponized).

Basically Every Organic Methodology Paper Ever

Basically Every Organic Methodology Paper Ever
The eternal chemistry bait-and-switch! Paper claims "diverse substrate scope" but it's just the same reaction with 40 nearly identical molecules where they changed one methyl group to an ethyl group and called it revolutionary. Meanwhile, try anything actually different and your yield plummets to 3% with seven side products. The true universal reaction remains elusive, but hey—at least their toy examples look impressive on those colorful chromatography charts!

How It Feels Differentiating E^X

How It Feels Differentiating E^X
The rare mathematical joke that's actually true! Differentiating e^x is like riding the world's most predictable roller coaster - you start with e^x, apply the magic differential operator, and end up exactly where you began. It's the mathematical equivalent of ordering takeout and finding they gave you exactly what you wanted. No chain rule drama, no product rule trauma, just beautiful mathematical narcissism where the function stares in the mirror and sees itself unchanged. The only relationship more stable than my coffee addiction.

Proof By Disagreement

Proof By Disagreement
When basic arithmetic collides with human stubbornness! Person 1 claims they could drive 2,000 miles in a day, but Person 2 drops the mathematical truth bomb: at 75 mph, it would take 26.6 hours. Not deterred by facts, Person 1 suggests skipping sleep (because who needs biology when you're trying to win an internet argument?). When asked for sources, Person 2 delivers the devastating "it's called math" mic drop, showing the beautiful simplicity of division. The final response of "Well, I'm not sure if I agree but ok" perfectly captures that moment when someone's brain refuses to accept they're wrong despite irrefutable evidence. The mathematical equivalent of watching someone fight against gravity!

The Equation Typesetting Horror

The Equation Typesetting Horror
The eternal struggle of math students everywhere! Someone innocently asks how to type equations, and the response is just... Microsoft Word? The silent horror on her face says it all. Anyone who's tried wrestling with Word's equation editor knows that pain. It's like trying to perform surgery with oven mitts. Meanwhile, LaTeX users are watching this conversation and quietly judging from a distance. The real joke is that proper mathematicians would rather write equations by hand on napkins than subject themselves to Word's equation torture chamber.

Extending To The Left Is More Fun

Extending To The Left Is More Fun
The eternal struggle of mathematicians who refuse to follow conventional notation. When you write 0.9 with a repeating decimal bar, it equals 1. But put that bar over the 9.0 and suddenly you're in negative territory. Mathematicians don't want you to know this one weird trick for inverting numbers. Next week: how to make your calculus professor have an aneurysm by writing limits from right to left.