Random Memes

Conflicted like your research interests at grant time

The Mouse That Shields Electronics

The Mouse That Shields Electronics
So physicists have finally discovered what Disney's lawyers have known for decades - the perfect shape for redirecting unwanted forces is Mickey Mouse's head! These researchers created a magnetic "cloaking device" that shields electronics from disruptive fields, and somehow landed on the most copyright-protected silhouette in history. I'm sure the University of Leicester has already received a cease and desist letter demanding 75% of all future scientific applications. Next up: superconducting Goofy-shaped circuits that somehow solve quantum gravity while simultaneously extending Disney's copyright another 20 years.

Gravity's Helpful Suggestion

Gravity's Helpful Suggestion
The physics teacher gives some well-meaning advice about working with gravity instead of fighting it. Meanwhile, the student takes this WAYYY too literally by standing on a rooftop and staring down! That moment when you interpret "go along with gravity" as "maybe I should just... fall?" 😂 It's the perfect example of physics humor meeting dark comedy! Newton would be rolling in his grave... which, ironically, is also because of gravity!

I Suddenly Remembered I'm Supposed To Be Anywhere Else

I Suddenly Remembered I'm Supposed To Be Anywhere Else
When the game show contestant asks for 14 Ns, but you're a chemist who knows that nitrogen (N) is involved in basically everything dangerous from explosives to biochemical warfare. That face isn't just concern—it's the universal lab expression for "I should probably leave before someone asks me to explain why I'm sweating." The perfect escape strategy: suddenly remembering you have an urgent appointment with literally anywhere that doesn't involve explaining nitrogen compounds to the FBI.

The Ultimate Evolutionary U-Turn

The Ultimate Evolutionary U-Turn
Remember when your ancestors decided to take a "quick dip" in the primordial waters? Just a "20-minute adventure" they said... Fast forward 50 million years and now you're a whale driving a car and making whale noises. Classic evolution prank! This meme brilliantly captures how tetrapods (four-limbed creatures) first ventured onto land from the sea, only for some mammals to eventually return to the ocean and evolve into cetaceans like whales. Talk about the ultimate evolutionary U-turn! Your great-great-great-(add 50 million more greats)-grandparents would be so confused right now.

Kinematics Problem From Hell

Kinematics Problem From Hell
The classic bait-and-switch physics problem takes a dark turn! What starts as a typical kinematics calculation (complete with masses and velocities) suddenly reveals itself as a confession. The punchline isn't about conservation of momentum or calculating the final velocity—it's about the driver losing their license after a hit-and-run. Physics teachers everywhere are simultaneously horrified and secretly impressed by this subversion of academic expectations. The cold, calculated setup makes the macabre twist even more effective than any equation could.

Textbook Humor: When Numbers Get Too Big To Care

Textbook Humor: When Numbers Get Too Big To Care
This textbook is basically saying "when your number is so massive it's stopped caring about small-time additions." Avogadro's number (10 23 ) is so ridiculously huge that adding 23 to it is like throwing a grain of sand into the Grand Canyon and expecting the tour guide to update the brochure. And then there's the "very large numbers" that are so astronomically gigantic they don't even notice when you multiply them by mere billions upon billions. It's the numerical equivalent of a celebrity too famous to acknowledge your existence. These numbers have transcended mathematical anxiety - they're just out there living their best life, completely unbothered by our operations. The footnote about "keeping track of leftover factors" is the textbook equivalent of a nervous laugh after making a dad joke at a faculty meeting.

I Think Therefore I Pose

I Think Therefore I Pose
Looks like AI finally answered the age-old question: "I think, therefore I... pose seductively?" Descartes went from founding modern philosophy to founding an OnlyFans account. His famous dualism just took on a whole new meaning—mind and body indeed. The algorithm clearly decided that beneath that serious 17th-century exterior was a man waiting to show some leg. Next time you're contemplating your existence, remember that even the father of rationalism apparently couldn't resist a little irrational lounging.

When Physics Puns Collide

When Physics Puns Collide
Particle physics humor at its finest! This diagram shows a positron (the antimatter equivalent of an electron) labeled as an "Antiparticle." It's basically the physics version of a dad joke—instead of an "anti-meme," you get an actual antiparticle! Positrons have the same mass as electrons but opposite charge, and when they meet their electron counterparts... BOOM! Total annihilation and pure energy release. Subatomic particles with attitude problems, I tell ya! 💥

Sigma-Aldrich Be Wildin'

Sigma-Aldrich Be Wildin'
When your PB&J sandwich costs more than your rent! Sigma-Aldrich really out here charging $1,830 for peanut butter because it's a "standard reference material." That's not lunch—that's a down payment on a car! Chemistry researchers nodding silently because they know the pain of seeing basic substances with scientific-grade markups that would make luxury brands blush. The struggle between wanting accurate results and not bankrupting the lab continues...

Behold, The Reverse Squareroot

Behold, The Reverse Squareroot
The mathematical dad joke we never knew we needed! This meme brilliantly plays with mathematical notation by flipping the square root symbol (√) upside down to create the "reverse square root." Instead of finding what number, when squared, gives you x, this imaginary operation asks what number, when "reverse-rooted," gives you x. It's basically squaring a number but with extra steps and a ridiculous symbol. Mathematicians everywhere are simultaneously groaning and forwarding this to their colleagues. Next up in mathematical comedy: the sideways cube root that only works on Tuesdays.

Quik Mafs: The Approximation Divide

Quik Mafs: The Approximation Divide
The fundamental divide in scientific approaches laid bare. Physicists and engineers casually toss around π ≈ 3 and sin(x) ≈ x when the math gets unwieldy. Meanwhile, mathematicians sit there, physically pained by such blasphemy against numerical purity. The horror on their faces when we say "eh, close enough" is worth every decimal point we discard. Nothing triggers a mathematician faster than a good approximation. And yet, somehow our bridges still stand and our rockets still fly.

They Were So Close (Mathematically Speaking)

They Were So Close (Mathematically Speaking)
The mathematical joke here is pure genius! The top equation represents convergence in mathematics (where points get arbitrarily close), while the bottom represents divergence (where points grow apart). So in 2024, these political figures were supposedly "converging" (working together), but by 2025, they're mathematically guaranteed to "diverge" (fall apart). It's the mathematical equivalent of saying "this relationship has the stability of a uranium isotope." The creator basically proved political fallouts using calculus. I'm going to use this in my next lecture when students ask for a "real-world application" of sequence convergence!