A recent posting in the blog Making Light points to a Flickr photoset of science tattoos.
Remember the Simpsons episode titled Homer Goes to College?
Benjamin (one of Homer’s nerd roomates): Come on, Mr. Simpson, you’ll never pass this course without learning the periodic table.
Homer: I’ll write it on my hand.
Benjamin: Hoh! Including all known lanthanides & actinides? Good luck!
Well, the guy in the photo below may not have written it on his hand, but he has managed to get the complete periodic table of the elements — and yes, complete with all known lanthanides and actinides (those are the two extra rows below the main table) — on his forearm, and permanently to boot!
I’m more of a physics and math guy than a chemistry guy, so these tats appeal to me a little more:
And finally, the time dilation equation:
The gist of this formula says that time slows down as you go faster. The slowing down doesn’t become really noticeable until you hit about one-tenth the speed of light; a 1970s experiment with two jets, each with its atomic clock, has provided empirical evidence.
Many science people I know — myself included — like to take scientific laws and weave them into our own personal philosophies. The owner of the time dilation formula is no exception:
The time dilation formula is over my heart and represents my personal belief in life: the faster you go, the more you get to see and the more you get to live. Maximum intensity and maximum velocity at all times for maximum lifetime experience per life.
In the words of Captain Picard: “Maximum warp! Engage!”
3 replies on “Science Tattoos”
The science tattoo collection was started by accident by science writer and blogger Carl Zimmer. http://scienceblogs.com/loom/
Also, you’re always allowed to have the periodic table with you at chemistry exams. In 5 years in the chemistry department I only ever memorized H-He-Li-Be-B-C-N-O-F and I roughly know where Mg and Na and Cl are from having to look them up often enough, but at exams you are allowed to bring it, or it’s handed out if you really need it, and it’s often on a poster in the background anyway, or printed as decoration on your coffee mug or the back of the free T-shirt the person in front of you is wearing.
F = ma – I don’t know why you didn’t get the capital sigma printed before the “F”. Sure it wouldn’t line up with your other tattoo as nicely but any “F” does not simply equal “ma,” as I’m sure you know. Plus, the sigma and vector notation would’ve looked cooler…
i agree you can always add it though later on