That works surprisingly well, though I'm terrified of magnets as large as Cody is using to vibrate the individual 'molecules'.
November 18, 2024
November 11, 2024
Floating stick man explained
I know, long-time blog followers have seen the floating stick man phenomenon before.
...but they haven't had Steve Mould explain why it works before, nor have they seen it used to animate an alien abduction.
November 4, 2024
How Do Dry Cleaners Clean Clothing
tl;dr - They use solvents with weaker IMFs that water - some of which are nonpolar.
It's been a big improvement over the ancient Roman 'dry scouring' which was based on fuller's earth, lye, and urine-sourced ammonia.
The solvents used have varied over time from turpentine, gasoline, benzene, and kerosene (all highly flammable, carcinogenic, and stinky leading most dry cleaning facilities to be located outside of densely populated cities) to tetrachlorethylene (which is less flammable but toxic to plants and animals and can lead to neurological issues like Parkinson's disease).
So, dry cleaning isn't remotely 'dry.' It's just cleaning with gentler machines using solvents that evaporate more quickly and readily than does water.
Liars...
October 28, 2024
Hypercolor, the most 90s of colors
That ad is so 90s that it should've been parodied on the Bill Nye show.
Hypercolor - a brand of thermochromic clothing that changed color when it warmed up - was a very narrow slice of popular culture, lasting only about a year in the popular culture of the time.
The science behind the thermochromic dye was pretty cool, similar to that used in touch-sensitive thermometers, but the fabric and its dye wasn't built for long-term wear.
Sadly, though, after a handful of washes, or one laundering misstep in too-hot water, the magic powers faded and the shirt froze permanently into a purple-brown mushy color. (source)
If you want a hypercolor shirt, the easiest way is probably to make one of your own.
October 21, 2024
Caption this...
I've sat this that shade, maybe not at that specific stadium but certainly at tennis matches where I've followed the sun and moved with the shade. In fact, if we started school a week or two later in the year, I'd likely be doing it for a week in August at the Cincinnati Open.
Sadly the picture isn't quite right in that the second row would need to be eight seats wide compared to only two seats for the first row. Or maybe four seats compared to one with people sitting on each other's laps to represent the Pauli Exclusion Principle.
All that would need the shadow line to be shallower, more of a 15 or 20 degree angle rather than the 45 that's in this picture.
But then the sun wouldn't be as bright and harsh when it was that low in the sky meaning that the people likely wouldn't be seeking out the sun as overtly and urgently.
So maybe it's best not to question this but rather to chuckle at it and move on.
And definitely don't go listening to the "Electron Configuration Polka" by Michael Offutt.
October 14, 2024
Exposing the Color Blind Glasses Scam
Take what this YouTuber has to say with a grain of salt. I will admit that I haven't researched and confirmed his claims, though I have watched all of the videos I'm posting today. I can say that they confirm something I've long been skeptical of: it seems unlikely that glorified sunglasses could produce colors in the eyes/brains of people who genetically can't see (or maybe can't differentiate) colors.
The enchroma glasses (and other, similar brands) seem to block a narrow band of colors leading to a greater differentiation between green and red meaning 'color blind' people can distinguish those colors more easily and can pass various 'color blind' tests like the classic numbers inside a circle. What the glasses seem incapable of, however, is actually letting those people see different colors that they inherently cannot see.
The science behind 'color blindness' is well explained here as is the science of what the glasses actually can do. The videos also explore common issues with scientific research - both conflicts of interest and confirmation biases as well as social pressure leading people to report results that may or may not actually be there.
October 11, 2024
I've been captcha-ed.
See, it's funny because there's no way to know where the electrons likely are in the quantum mechanical model of the atom. The best we can do is predict where the electrons will likely be found.
So, I'm going to fail that captcha.