posted 7/8/2010 10:12:55 AM by Vivek Thakur - Views: [16379]
Here are some really funny scientific jokes, particularly related to Physics:
Two atoms bump into each other. One says 'I think I lost an electron!' The other asks, 'Are you sure?', to which the first replies, 'I'm positive.'
All the physicists are playing hide and seek. Einstein is the ‘den’ and stands against the wall with his eyes closed and counts till 100 to enable all the physicists to run and hide. At the count of 100 Einstein turns around and finds Newton standing there.He screams, “Newton, you are out!” Newton says, “No, I ‘m not!”Einstein says, “Yes, you are. I can see you here in front of me”.Newton says, “I’m not out. Pascal is.”Einstein is a bit confused and starts to scratch his head and beard.Newton says “Here, Let me explain”He draws a square one meter by one meter on the floor and stands in the middle of it and says,“Newton per meter square is a Pascal, so it’s Pascal who’s out not me”
When a certain nuclear physicist went on holidays he hung a sign on his laboratory door which read: "Gone Nuclear Fission."
Two electrons are sitting on a bench in the park. Another electron comes walking by and says:"Hi there, can I come sit with you?", to which the electrons reply:"Don't be ridiculous, we aren't Bosons."
Why did Werner Heisenberg hate driving cars?Because, every time he looked at the speedometer he got lost!A neutron walks into a bar and orders a beer."How much for the beer?" the neutron asks the bartender."For you?" replies the bartender,"no charge."
What did the nuclear physicist have for lunch?Fission chips.
Why did the chicken cross the road?Issac Newton: Chickens at rest tend to stay at rest, chickens in motion tend to cross roads.Darwin: Chickens, over great periods of time, have been naturally selected in such a way that they are now genetically dispositioned to cross roads.Albert Einstein: Whether the chicken crossed the road or the road moved beneath the chicken depends upon your frame of reference. Oliver Stone: The question is not "Why did the chicken cross the road? But is rather, "Who was crossing the road at the same time, whom we overlooked in our haste to observe the chicken crossing?"Saddam Hussein: This was an unprovoked act of rebellion and we were quite justified in dropping 50 tons of nerve gas on it. Heisenberg: Because the chicken is moving very fast, you can either observe thechicken or you can measure its speed, but you cannot do both.Jean Foucault: It didn’t. The rotation of the earth made it appear to cross.Galileo: To get a better look at the stars.Ohm: There was more resistance on this side of the road.Pascal: It was pressured to cross the road.Volta: The other side had more potential.Hawking: There exist numerous parallel universes in which the same chicken is in differing stages of crossing the road. Only when one of the chickens hascompleted crossing the road do their ave functions coallesce.Freud: The fact that you are at all concerned that the chicken crossed the road reveals your underlying sexual insecurity.Buckminister Fuller: Because we have not yet designed and implemented true,constantly forwardly/backwardly evolving, energy-transforming livingmachines which will enable us to perform all functions from the informedlyturbining hub of a single autonomous in-spiralling/out-radiating network ofspace-connected information vector transforms. Had the chicken beensupplied with my Dymaxion Tensegrity Coop, it would have remained at home,un-tempted by such risky spatial-temporal translations.Grandpa: In our days, we didn't ask why the chicken crossed the road. Someone told us that the chicken had crossed the road, and that was good enough for us.
Vivek Thakur (Member since: 3/18/2010 6:19:45 PM) I am one of those computer nerds who loves playing guitar. Professionally, I am the co-founder of a small software firm, Axero Solutions, based in California, USA. Our company creates software for social networking and business collaboration using Communifire, a unique platform which helps companies create external as well as internal collaboration networks. I am also the author of the book: Application Architecture and Design in ASP.NET by Packt Publications (2008). I am a big follower and advocate of Chaos Theory in software systems and management (SCRUM methodology).
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