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Category: Physics & chemistry

Drops
By The Generalist Posted on January 12, 2020March 11, 2020

Shattered tears

In the late 17th century CE, Prince Rupert’s drops were some of the most confusing objects known to science: an extremely tough glass teardrop that will disintegrate if its tail is even slightly damaged.

Categories: Physics & chemistry, Sciences
Test tubes
By The Generalist Posted on January 7, 2020January 6, 2020

Worst stink

Organosulfur compounds include some of the sweetest and the worst smells known to science. Thioacetone is the worst of them all.

Categories: Physics & chemistry, Sciences
Snapdragon
By The Generalist Posted on December 24, 2019April 21, 2021

Flapdragon

A Christmas Eve parlour game played in Victorian England involved grabbing burning raisins with your hands and eating them while they were still alight.

Categories: Food & agriculture, Games & sport, Physics & chemistry, Religion & belief, Sciences
Tractor beam
By The Generalist Posted on November 25, 2019November 24, 2019

Tractor beaming

The idea of the tractor beam first appeared in fiction in 1931. Since then, scientists have worked to make it a reality… and they’ve actually had some success.

Categories: Arts & recreation, Literature, Physics & chemistry, Sciences, Technology
Don Juan Pond
By The Generalist Posted on November 20, 2019April 17, 2021

Saltiest ponds

We’ve all heard of the Dead Sea, so salty that people naturally float in it. But the Gaet’ale Pond in Ethiopia is saltier, and the Don Juan Pond in Antarctica is so salty that it doesn’t freeze, even at -50°C.

Categories: Africa, Earth science, Physics & chemistry, Places, Sciences, The poles
Pressure suit
By The Generalist Posted on November 1, 2019April 17, 2021

Boiling saliva

There is a point not more than 20km away from you right now where your normal body temperature is enough to boil the saliva off your tongue and the moisture out of your lungs.

Categories: Astronomy, Health & medicine, Physics & chemistry, Sciences
Snowflake
By The Generalist Posted on October 21, 2019January 25, 2023

Space ice

Water freezes into ice. This is not new information to you (I hope). But which kind? Because there are eighteen different phases of ice, including electric viral space ice.

Categories: Astronomy, Physics & chemistry, Sciences
Air shower
By The Generalist Posted on August 4, 2019April 17, 2021

Cosmic election

The universe is full of cosmic rays, blasted out from neighbouring galaxies, supernovae, and the like. In 2003, they nearly changed the outcome of a local Belgian election.

Categories: Astronomy, Computer science, Physics & chemistry, Politics & law, Sciences
Impossible colours
By The Generalist Posted on June 7, 2019June 6, 2019

Impossible colours

Through some tricks of the human eye, we can see colours outside of the normal visual range: Stygian, self-luminous, and hyperbolic colours, and perhaps even combinations like redgreen. These are the impossible colours.

Categories: Physics & chemistry, Sciences
Iceberg
By The Generalist Posted on May 7, 2019April 28, 2021

Iceberg battleship

Take water, mix with wood pulp, and freeze. Now it’s as strong and tough as concrete, as long as it stays frozen. So, in World War II, serious plans were afoot to use it to build battleships out of ice.

Categories: 20th century history, History, Physics & chemistry, Sciences, Technology
Noble rot
By The Generalist Posted on May 3, 2019August 20, 2019

Antifreeze wine

Remember that Simpsons episode where Bart went to France and witnessed antifreeze being added to wine? It had its basis in fact, although it got the country wrong.

Categories: Economics & business, Europe, Food & agriculture, Physics & chemistry, Places, Sciences
Lead
By The Generalist Posted on April 19, 2019April 17, 2021

Death chemist

Thomas Midgley Jr. was responsible for two of the most environmentally damaging inventions of the 20th century. An environmental historian said he “had more impact on the atmosphere than any other single organism in Earth’s history.”

Categories: Earth science, Economics & business, Health & medicine, Physics & chemistry, Sciences, Technology
Radiation
By The Generalist Posted on March 15, 2019April 28, 2021

Atomic gardening

In the 1950s, as part of the nuclear energy craze, gardeners exposed seeds or seedlings to gamma radiation in order to induce beneficial mutations. In the UK, seeds were mailed out to enthusiasts to grow. Many of the plants died, or got weird growths, as you would expect. Some, however, thrived.

Categories: 20th century history, Food & agriculture, History, Physics & chemistry, Sciences
Electron and Positron
By The Generalist Posted on February 27, 2019September 23, 2021

One electron in the universe

John Wheeler proposed the idea that there was only one electron in the whole universe.

Categories: Physics & chemistry
By The Generalist Posted on February 26, 2019April 17, 2021

Walking on water

Oobleck looks and behaves like a liquid, but you can walk over it as if you were walking on water.

Categories: Physics & chemistry

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