Random Memes

Chosen by rolling actual dice in the lab

Draw 25 Or Admit Physicists Use Approximations

Draw 25 Or Admit Physicists Use Approximations
The eternal dilemma of physics! On one hand, you could admit that physicists basically play the "close enough" game with approximations to solve impossible equations. On the other hand... *draws 25 cards* 😂 This perfectly captures how physicists would rather complicate their lives with ridiculous workarounds than admit their elegant equations are actually just glorified guesswork. The UNO card is basically saying "confess your mathematical sins or suffer the consequences!" Next time your physicist friend acts superior, just whisper "spherical cow" and watch them break into a cold sweat.

Increasing The Surface Area Of A Substance Increases Its Reaction Rate: Proof By Garlic

Increasing The Surface Area Of A Substance Increases Its Reaction Rate: Proof By Garlic
Chemistry class meets cooking class in this deliciously scientific demonstration! The garlic cheat sheet perfectly illustrates surface area effects on reaction rates. Each time you mutilate that poor garlic bulb further, you're unleashing more allicin compounds by breaking cell walls. It's basically garlic violence with scientific justification! The more cells you brutally rupture, the more enzymes and substrates collide, creating that eye-watering, vampire-repelling flavor intensity. Next time someone complains about your heavy-handed garlic crushing, just scream "IT'S SCIENCE!" and continue your culinary experiment.

The Sacred Academic Knighting Ceremony

The Sacred Academic Knighting Ceremony
That magical moment when years of existential dread, caffeine overdoses, and crying in lab supply closets culminates in someone finally calling you "Doctor." The PhD student's face probably goes from "impending doom" to "I might actually survive this timeline" in 0.3 seconds flat. It's basically the academic equivalent of being knighted, except instead of a sword, they tap you with crushing student debt and the inability to explain your research at family gatherings. Those 17 committee members knew exactly what they were doing - turning that single word into the most powerful dopamine hit in scientific history. Science has yet to develop a measuring instrument sensitive enough to quantify the pure joy in that moment!

I'm Still Rooting For The Riemann's Zeta Function Album!

I'm Still Rooting For The Riemann's Zeta Function Album!
This mathematical masterpiece shows Ed Sheeran's album progression (+, ×, ÷, =) followed by what could only be his most ambitious work yet: finding the zeros of the Riemann Zeta function! For the uninitiated, this infamous mathematical problem has stumped brilliant minds for over 160 years. The function ζ(s) = Σ(1/n^s) looks innocent enough, but proving all non-trivial zeros lie on a specific line (the Riemann Hypothesis) would literally earn you $1 million from the Clay Mathematics Institute. Imagine Ed dropping an album that casually solves one of the greatest unsolved problems in mathematics! His streaming numbers would be prime... I mean, prime-time amazing!

One-Sided Argument: The Möbius Dilemma

One-Sided Argument: The Möbius Dilemma
When mathematicians try to explain a Möbius strip to non-math people, it's like trying to convince someone they're seeing a blue alien. A Möbius strip is that mind-bending one-sided surface where if you trace your finger along it, you'll end up back where you started but on the "opposite" side—except there is no opposite side! It's simultaneously the simplest and most confusing thing in topology. The skeptical "Do you have proof?" is basically what every math professor hears after showing a seemingly impossible theorem. "Trust me, I did the calculations" just doesn't hit the same as photographic evidence of extraterrestrial life.

Brain.exe Has Stopped Working

Brain.exe Has Stopped Working
Your brain is being bamboozled right now! Those "concentric circles" are actually spirals masquerading as perfect circles. The cat's reactions are SPOT ON—from stoic confusion to absolute mental breakdown. Your visual cortex is essentially having a meltdown trying to trace these "circles" that never actually complete. Fun neuroscience fact: your brain processes visual information in parallel pathways, and optical illusions like this exploit the conflict between what you expect to see (circles) and what's actually there (spirals). Your poor neurons are firing in confusion while the cat's second face is all of us realizing we've been neurologically pranked!

The Uninvited Pioneers Of Electromagnetism

The Uninvited Pioneers Of Electromagnetism
The historical snub that keeps physicists up at night! While Maxwell's equations get the spotlight (deservedly capturing electromagnetism in four elegant lines), poor Leibniz, Faraday, and Ampere are giving us the death stare from outside the mathematical hall of fame. Classic academic politics - do all the experimental groundwork, and some Scottish guy comes along, wraps it in fancy notation, and gets equation #11 on the list. The real pioneers of electromagnetism looking through the window like uninvited guests to their own party. That's science for you - it's not what you discover, it's how prettily you write it down.

The Salt Synthesis Spectrum

The Salt Synthesis Spectrum
The evolution of salt acquisition perfectly captures the scientific mind's descent into madness. Starting with the pedestrian "grocery store salt" (yawn), we progress to the slightly more adventurous "boiling seawater" method that our ancestors used. But then things get serious . Ordering from Sigma-Aldrich? That's when you know you've crossed into true lab nerd territory. Those catalog prices will make your research budget cry! The real chemistry enthusiasts, though, synthesize their own NaCl through neutralization reactions. And finally, at peak obsession, we have the unhinged chemist handling pure sodium metal and chlorine gas—substances that would individually kill you—just to make the same stuff you sprinkle on french fries. It's the perfect metaphor for academic progression: the further you go, the more unnecessarily complicated and dangerous your methods become, all while your friends and family wonder why you don't just go to Costco like a normal person.

Periodic Password Protection

Periodic Password Protection
The secret language of chemists strikes again! This genius converted their passcode into the atomic numbers of elements that spell "SLaY" (16-57-39). It's basically encryption that only periodic table enthusiasts would crack! The smug face says it all - nothing feels more powerful than using chemistry for your everyday passwords while normies stare in confusion. Next-level nerd flex that makes us lab rats feel like secret agents. *adjusts safety goggles dramatically*

Every Physics Student's Relationship Crisis

Every Physics Student's Relationship Crisis
The classic relationship misinterpretation that only a physics major could make. While she's asking for emotional space, our poor protagonist is mentally plugging variables into v = d/t . That's what happens when you spend four years having Newton's laws beaten into your skull—suddenly everything becomes a kinematics problem. The relationship might be accelerating toward a break-up at 9.8 m/s², but at least he'll be able to calculate exactly when it hits rock bottom.

Spontaneously Single: When Thermodynamics Enters The Chat

Spontaneously Single: When Thermodynamics Enters The Chat
When your dating strategy is thermodynamically favorable. Instead of a pickup line, this scientist went straight for the Gibbs free energy equation (ΔG

The Gravity Of A Physics Textbook

The Gravity Of A Physics Textbook
Physics textbooks: simultaneously crushing students' spirits and tofu since 1949. The beautiful irony here is watching one of the authors, Roger Freedman, engage with peak academic humor by citing specific chapters when someone uses his 1000-page doorstop as a kitchen tool. Notice how he doesn't deny the book's primary function as an emotional torture device—just smoothly transitions into "teaching mode" even on Twitter. That's dedication to the craft of making students question their life choices while precisely measuring the force applied to soybean curds.