Author Topic: Things you discovered on accident.  (Read 2811 times)




Most of my special interestes

I recently discovered that dank memes can melt steel beams.


I was bored so I put a wine bottle in the fire. I decided to pull it out with a stick and it exploded. Sems like glass explodes with rapid temperature changes and here I am, picking up glass pieces off the grass.
I thought you studied chemistry.
You should definitely know that glass is subject to thermal shock, silly.

That's why you leave glass objects that have been above a bunsen burner resting on their tripod when finished, so they can gradually cool down, rather than putting them down onto the much cooler table surface.

brother that's physics. I no longer have physics in class. Organic chemistry, biological chemistry, and inorganic chemistry.

non lte tmobile smartphones suck richard on highways

2g and constantly dropping signals

brother that's physics. I no longer have physics in class. Organic chemistry, biological chemistry, and inorganic chemistry.
No I am pretty sure that is chemistry

The physical properties aren't given to me to study. My notebooks are full of mechanisms, chemical equations, acids and bases, how much energy the reactions let go of and redox. Nothing about how glass explodes with rapid temperature changes.

non lte tmobile smartphones suck richard on highways

2g and constantly dropping signals
Edit: and the slow and dropping internet causes me to double post without realizing it

The physical properties aren't given to me to study. My notebooks are full of mechanisms, chemical equations, acids and bases, how much energy the reactions let go of and redox. Nothing about how glass explodes with rapid temperature changes.
yeah except in every loving chemistry class known to man they tell you ouright "hey if glass heats the forget up too fast it'll explode and that's forgetin bad" jesus christ you forgetin wank I bet you were sleeping during it anyway

/rage

OT: if you touch your richard enough glue comes out

The physical properties aren't given to me to study. My notebooks are full of mechanisms, chemical equations, acids and bases, how much energy the reactions let go of and redox. Nothing about how glass explodes with rapid temperature changes.
Yeah, it's not taught as the syllabus, but as part of regular laboratory practice.

You don't heat things up, or cool them down too quickly, particularly glass.

Quote from: Clownfish link=topic=289175.msg8741974
I don't sleep in class nor fool around. :C