Random Memes

Graphed like your experimental results - all over the place

Dua Lipa's New Rules: Elementary Particles Edition

Dua Lipa's New Rules: Elementary Particles Edition
Forget "Levitating" – Dua's clearly moved on to elementary particles. Griffiths' particle physics textbook is like that indie band everyone forgets about while obsessing over Jackson's Electrodynamics and Griffiths' own Quantum Mechanics. Physics students spend four years worshipping at the altar of QM, then suddenly need to understand fermions and bosons for grad school and panic-buy this book. The Standard Model doesn't care about your pop culture status – those quarks and leptons will humble you faster than a thesis defense committee on a Monday morning.

They're Heeeeeere: The Drake Equation Remix

They're Heeeeeere: The Drake Equation Remix
The actual Drake Equation estimates the number of detectable alien civilizations in our galaxy using variables like star formation rates and probability of habitable planets. But clearly Frank was having a rough day when he simplified it to "A×B×C" where A=aliens, B=better be, C=catgirls. Honestly, can't blame the man. After decades of pointing radio telescopes at empty space, you start hoping for something more interesting than just another hydrogen signature. The scientific method never specified what kind of aliens we're looking for, so why not optimize for the ones that would make interstellar diplomacy more... intriguing?

The Precision Hierarchy

The Precision Hierarchy
The disciplinary hierarchy of numerical precision is something to behold. Math keeps it simple with exact integers. Physics introduces measurement uncertainty, giving us that tantalizing "almost 4" that haunts experimental physicists. But computer science? That's where floating-point errors reveal themselves in all their glory. That extra 0.0000000000000001 isn't a bug—it's a feature showing we're actually calculating something. Nothing says "I understand binary representation limitations" like pretending your rounding errors are intentional.

Physics Would Be Simpler Indeed

Physics Would Be Simpler Indeed
Imagine a world where molecules don't bump into each other, volume doesn't matter, and PV=nRT works EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. 🤯 Chemistry students would throw parties! Physics equations would fit on a sticky note! No more correction factors or Van der Waals equations making our homework three pages longer. The dream of every science student trapped in thermodynamics hell - a universe where reality doesn't ruin our beautiful, simple theories!

Approximately Equal To Exactly Wrong

Approximately Equal To Exactly Wrong
The mathematical rebel's manifesto! Here we have the "approximately equals" symbol (≈) twice, followed by an "equals" (=) symbol. It's basically saying that "approximately + approximately = exactly." This is the mathematical equivalent of "two wrongs make a right" and would make any mathematician's eye twitch uncontrollably. In reality, compounding approximations actually increases uncertainty—a fact that error propagation equations would like to have a word about. Statistical nightmares are made of this!

Cern Plans To Ship Antimatter To Other Labs In Europe. How This Is Gonna End

Cern Plans To Ship Antimatter To Other Labs In Europe. How This Is Gonna End

Stephen Hawking And FPS Optimization

Stephen Hawking And FPS Optimization
Gaming nerds 🤝 Theoretical physicists: Optimizing performance at all costs. The meme brilliantly combines the absurd "glasses = smart" stereotype with computer gaming logic. Claiming smart people have poor eyesight because they're running their brains at higher processing speeds is hilariously wrong yet weirdly satisfying as a theory. Then comes the savage punchline about Stephen Hawking "closing background tasks for more fps" - a dark but genius joke about how his brilliant mind operated despite his physical limitations. It's the perfect collision of gamer culture and science humor that's simultaneously terrible and brilliant.

The Temperature Hierarchy Of Scientific Smugness

The Temperature Hierarchy Of Scientific Smugness
The escalating sophistication of a simple weather forecast is peak scientific snobbery. Sure, the average person thinks doubling Fahrenheit means twice as hot (spoiler: it doesn't). The Celsius users feel slightly superior but still pedestrian. Then we have the Kelvin enthusiasts in formal attire because obviously they're intellectually superior using absolute temperature. But that final panel? That's the astrophysicist who can't help but mention stellar temperatures because regular weather is beneath them. Nothing says "I have a PhD" quite like responding to "nice weather today" with a dissertation on solar surface temperatures.

I Personally Only Use Kips

I Personally Only Use Kips
Newton is literally rolling in his grave right now! The physics police have arrived, and they're writing tickets for improper unit usage! 🚨 Mass (measured in kg) is the amount of matter in an object, while weight is actually a force (should be measured in Newtons) caused by gravity acting on that mass. So technically, your "80 kg" is your mass, not your weight! Next time you're on the moon, your mass will still be 80 kg, but your weight would only be about 1/6 of what it is on Earth. Physics nerds unite! This is the hill we're willing to die on... though we'd prefer to express that hill's height in meters, not feet.

The Noble Life Of Group 18

The Noble Life Of Group 18
Chemistry students know the struggle. Groups 1-17? Sure, whatever. But Group 18? *chef's kiss* Those noble gases don't react with anything. They've achieved electron nirvana with their full valence shells. Zero reactivity, zero drama. It's the chemical equivalent of showing up to lab in a tuxedo when everyone else is frantically trying to form bonds. Noble gases really are the most sophisticated elements on the periodic table—they don't need anyone else to feel complete.

I Want To Go Back

I Want To Go Back
Remember when these blackboards full of equations were just decorative math book cover art? Your 12-year-old self thought "that looks smart" while your 30-year-old physicist self is frantically writing similar equations at 3 AM before a deadline. The math book covers weren't warnings—they were prophecies. Those cute little sine waves and integrals eventually evolved into quantum field theory nightmares that haunt your dreams. Somewhere in the multiverse, your childhood self is looking at this picture thinking "cool squiggles" while present you is wondering if that partial differential equation in the corner might actually solve your research problem.

Fibonacci's Sequence Goes Viral

Fibonacci's Sequence Goes Viral
This is mathematical inception at its finest! Someone's brilliantly using the Fibonacci sequence (where each number is the sum of the two preceding ones: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13...) to determine their upvote goals! Notice how they're asking for 610, 987, 1597, 2584, and now 4181 upvotes - each perfectly following the sequence! What makes this extra genius is how the post itself is recursively growing like a mathematical fractal - screenshots within screenshots within screenshots! It's like watching the birth of a mathematical universe in Reddit form. Nature uses Fibonacci patterns in flowers and shells, but this mad lad is using it to farm karma!