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- The Ultimate Scientific Dictionary
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-
- Activation Energy:
- The useful quantity of energy available in one cup of coffee.
-
- Atomic Theory:
- A mythological explanation of the nature of matter, first proposed
- by the ancient Greeks, and now thoroughly discredited by modern
- computer simulation. Attempts to verify the theory by modern computer
- simulation have failed. Instead, it has been demonstrated repeatedly
- that computer outputs depend upon the color of the programmer's eyes,
- or occasionally upon the month of his or her birth. This apparent
- astrological connection, at last, vindicates the alchemist's view of
- astrology as the mother of all science.
-
- Bacon, Roger:
- An English friar who dabbled in science and made experimentation
- fashionable. Bacon was the first science popularizer to make it big
- on the banquet and talk-show circuit, and his books even outsold the
- fad diets of the period.
-
- Biological Science:
- A contradiction in terms.
-
- Bunsen Burner:
- A device invented by Robert Bunsen (1811-1899) for brewing coffee in
- the laboratory, thereby enabling the chemist to be poisoned without
- having to go all the way to the company cafeteria.
-
- Butyl:
- An unpleasant-sounding word denoting an unpleasant-smelling alcohol.
-
- CAI:
- Acronym for "Computer-Aided Instruction". The modern system of training
- professional scientists without ever exposing them to the hazards and
- expense of laboratory work. Graduates of CAI-based programs are very
- good at simulated research.
-
- Cavendish:
- A variety of pipe tobacco that is reputed to produce remarkably clear
- thought processes, and thereby leads to major scientific discoveries;
- hence, the name of a British research laboratory where the tobacco is
- smoked in abundance.
-
- Chemical:
- A substance that: 1) An organic chemist turns into a foul odor; 2) an
- analytical chemist turns into a procedure; 3) a physical chemist turns
- into a straight line; 4) a biochemist turns into a helix; 5) a chemical
- engineer turns into a profit.
-
- Chemical Engineering:
- The practice of doing for a profit what an organic chemist only does for fun.
-
- Chromatography:
- (From Gr. chromo [color] + graphos [writing]) The practice of submitting
- manuscripts for publication with the original figures drawn in non-reproducing
- blue ink.
-
- Clinical Testing:
- The use of humans as guinea pigs. (See also PHARMACOLOGY and TOXICOLOGY)
-
- Compound:
- To make worse, as in: 1) A fracture; 2) the mutual adulteration of
- two or more elements.
-
- Computer Resources:
- The major item of any budget, allowing for the acquisition of any capital
- equipment that is obsolete before the purchase request is released.
-
- Eigen Function:
- The use to which an eigen is put.
-
- En:
- The universal bidentate ligand used by coordination chemists. For years,
- efforts were made to use ethylenediamine for this purpose, but chemists
- were unable to squeeze all the letters between the corners of the
- octahedron diagram. The timely invention of en in 1947 revolutionized
- the science.
-
- Evaporation Allowance:
- The volume of alcohol that the graduate students can drink in a year's time.
-
- Exhaustive Methylation:
- A marathon event in which the participants methylate until they drop
- from exhaustion.
-
- First Order Reaction:
- The reaction that occurs first, not always the one desired. For example,
- the formation of brown gunk in an organic prep.
-
- Flame Test:
- Trial by fire.
-
- Genetic Engineering:
- A recent attempt to formalize what engineers have been doing informally
- all along.
-
- Grignard:
- A fictitious class of compounds often found on organic exams and never
- in real life.
-
- Inorganic Chemistry:
- That which is left over after the organic, analytical, and physical
- chemists get through picking over the periodic table.
-
- Mercury:
- (From L. Mercurius, the swift messenger of the gods) Element No. 80, so
- named because of the speed of which one of its compounds (calomel, Hg2Cl2)
- goes through the human digestive tract. The element is perhaps misnamed,
- because the gods probably would not be pleased by the physiological message
- so delivered.
-
- Monomer:
- One mer. (Compare POLYMER).
-
- Natural Product:
- A substance that earns organic chemists fame and glory when they manage
- to systhesize it with great difficulty, while Nature gets no credit for
- making it with great ease.
-
- Organic Chemistry:
- The practice of transmuting vile substances into publications.
-
- Partition Function:
- The function of a partition is to protect the lab supervisor from
- shrapnel produced in laboratory explosions.
-
- Pass/Fail:
- An attempt by professional educators to replace the traditional
- academic grading system with a binary one that can be handled by
- a large digital computer.
-
- Pharmacology:
- The use of rabbits and dogs as guinea pigs. (See also CLINICAL
- TESTING, TOXICOLOGY).
-
- Physical Chemistry:
- The pitiful attempt to apply y=mx+b to everything in the universe.
-
- Pilot Plant:
- A modest facility used for confirming design errors before they are
- built into a costly, full-scale production facility.
-
- Polymer:
- Many mers. (Compare MONOMERS).
-
- Prelims:
- (From L. pre [before] + limbo [oblivion]) An obligatory ritual practiced
- by graduate students just before the granting of a Ph.D. (if the gods are
- appeased) or an M.S. (if they aren't).
-
- Publish or Perish:
- The imposed, involuntary choice between fame and oblivion, neither of
- which is handled gracefully by most faculty members.
-
- Purple Passion:
- A deadly libation prepared by mixing equal volumes of grape juice and
- lab alcohol.
-
- Quantum Mechanics:
- A crew kept on the payroll to repair quantums, which decay frequently
- to the ground state.
-
- Rate Equations:
- (Verb phrase) To give a grade or a ranking to a formula based on its
- utility and applicability. H=E, for example, applies to everything
- everywhere, and therefore rates an A. pV=nRT, on the other hand, is
- good only for nonexistent gases and thus receives only a D+, but this
- grade can be changed to a B- if enough empirical virial coefficients
- are added.
-
- Research:
- (Irregular noun) That which I do for the benefit of humanity, you do
- for the money, he does to hog all the glory.
-
- Sagan:
- The international unit of humility.
-
- Scientific Method:
- The widely held philosophy that a theory can never be proved, only
- disproved, and that all attempts to explain anything are therefore futile.
-
- SI:
- Acronym for "Systeme Infernelle".
-
- Spectrophotometry:
- A long word used mainly to intimidate freshman nonmajors.
-
- Spectroscope:
- A disgusting-looking instrument used by medical specialists to probe
- and examine the spectrum.
-
- Toxicology:
- The wholesale slaughter of white rats bred especially for that purpose.
- (See also CLINICAL TESTING, PHARMACOLOGY).
-
- X-Ray Diffraction:
- An occupational disorder common among physicians, caused by reading
- X-ray pictures in darkened rooms for prolonged periods. The condition
- is readily cured by a greater reliance on blood chemistries; the lab
- results are just as inconclusive as the X-rays, but are easier to read.
-
- Ytterbium:
- A rare and inconsequential element, named after the village of Ytterby,
- Sweden (not to be confused with Iturbi, the late pianist and film
- personality, who was actually Spanish, not Swedish). Ytterbium is
- used mainly to fill block 70 in the periodic table. Iturbi was used
- mainly to play Jane Powell's father.
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- *** EOF
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