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Weird NMR Samples: They Analyzed WHAT?

August 18, 2017August 18, 2017 scishenan 2 Comments Chemistry
Weird NMR Samples: oil, cheese, wine and violins

Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) is an incredibly useful characterization technique. Assuming certain properties are met, the nucleus of an atom interacts with a magnetic field. The exact nature of that interaction is highly dependent on the environment around the atom. So you can get a ton of information about the structure of a molecule by […]

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Naughty Science Acronyms

August 4, 2017July 7, 2019 scishenan Biology, Chemistry
Naughty science acronyms

I’ve spent most of this week writing about science for kids. So for a change of pace, today we’re looking at some naughty science acronyms. We are all very mature scientists who would never giggle upon realizing that the acronym is something a little risqué. Dirty jokes about Uranus are of course rather well known, […]

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Mundane Tools in Science

July 28, 2017July 28, 2017 scishenan Biology, Chemistry, Physics
Mundane tools in science: Scotch tape, duct tape and pennies

The popular image of science involves a lot of high tech tools. The reality is, much like any job, you end up using some utterly mundane things.  Often while fixing the high tech ones. While the Maguyveresque electronics shop manager at my grad school probably didn’t really use bubblegum and a paperclip to repair NMR […]

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Silanone vs Silicone: When the name is already taken

July 21, 2017 scishenan Chemistry
Cartoon of a silanone and some random silicone objects

Scientific nomenclature can be a bit of a funny thing, as we’ve discussed before. When you make something entirely new, it obviously needs a name. Today we’re talking about the strange situation of silanones, where the most obvious name was already taken by something that is not accurately described by the name. Silicone Since silicon […]

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The Best Scientific Footnote

June 6, 2017August 14, 2017 scishenan Chemistry

Today, we are talking about the most beautiful footnote I have ever read. Or at least the best footnote I have ever read in a scientific paper, as the rest of us cannot hope to aspire to the footnote talents of Sir Terry Pratchett. Whether they will admit it or not, every scientist has at […]

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My Favourite Ridiculous NMR Acronyms

June 1, 2017August 14, 2017 scishenan 6 Comments Chemistry

Perhaps it was inevitable that I would end up writing a blog about the silly side of science. After all, I did write my thesis on NMR spectroscopy. And as I am about to show you, NMR people can get very, very silly when they’re coming up with acronyms for their pulse sequences. The following […]

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Science Shenanigans is a blog dedicated to sharing the sillier side of science with the world. Because scientists are as prone to silliness as anyone else.

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