Difference between revisions of "3178: Hyperacute Interdynamics"
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:[Miss Lenhart is talking to her students] | :[Miss Lenhart is talking to her students] | ||
:Miss Lenhart: Modern physics rests on three main pillars:<br> | :Miss Lenhart: Modern physics rests on three main pillars:<br> | ||
| − | general relativity, which describes very massive objects, | + | :general relativity, which describes very massive objects, |
:[A zoom on Miss Lenhart's face] | :[A zoom on Miss Lenhart's face] | ||
:Miss Lenhart: Quantum Mechanics, which describes very small objects, | :Miss Lenhart: Quantum Mechanics, which describes very small objects, | ||
Revision as of 03:10, 9 December 2025
| Hyperacute Interdynamics |
Title text: Our models fall apart where the three theories overlap; we're unable to predict what happens when a nanometer-sized squirrel eats a grapefruit with the mass of the sun. |
Explanation
| This is one of 51 incomplete explanations: This page was created BY A STAR WITH THE MASS OF A SQUIRREL. Don't remove this notice too soon. If you can fix this issue, edit the page! |
This comic depicts Miss Lenhart teaching a class, which has been a recent recurring theme on xkcd. She describes the three pillars of physics, those being General relativity concerning very large objects, Quantum mechanics concerning very small objects, and Thermodynamics. In the comic, Miss Lenhart replaces Thermodynamics with the fictional Hyperacute Interdynamics, which specifically covers objects 10-30cm (~4" - ~12") in size and 200-700g (0.44lb - 1.54lb) in mass. A student points out that the concept of Hyperacute Thermodynamics is quite limited.
The teacher responds by stating that this is made up for by the fact that it is apparently very accurate and precise, and gives examples of how it is able to perfect squirrels and grapefruit, two objects which both fit the necessary size and weight specifications. She also states that there are hopes to unify this system with the other two.
The title text takes the joke further, giving reason to Miss Lenhart's remark about unification. She comments that, under the current system, measurements which require elements from all three pillars are impossible. The example she gives is equally absurd as the concept of Hyperacute Interdynamics itself, stating that it is unknown when a nanometer-sized squirrel (covering Quantum Mechanics and Hyperacute Interdynamics) eats a grapefruit with the mass of the sun (once again covering Hyperacute Interdynamics as well as General Relativity). This scenario would never occur in real life, so it is unknown why scientists would be willing to pursue it.
There is an inaccuracy in the comic: the Eastern Gray Squirrel, which is the most prevalent squirrel in Massachusetts (where Randall lives), measures 16-20 inches on average when fully grown, meaning that a fully-grown squirrel would be too big for Hyperacute Interdynamics to apply.
Transcript
| This is one of 28 incomplete transcripts: Don't remove this notice too soon. If you can fix this issue, edit the page! |
- [Miss Lenhart is teaching Cueball and Jill in a classroom. Both students are sitting at desks and Jill can be seen taking notes.]
- [Miss Lenhart is talking to her students]
- Miss Lenhart: Modern physics rests on three main pillars:
- general relativity, which describes very massive objects,
- [A zoom on Miss Lenhart's face]
- Miss Lenhart: Quantum Mechanics, which describes very small objects,
- [The view zooms back out. Miss Lenhart can be seen in the center of the panel near the bottom.]
- Miss Lenhart: and Hyperacute Interdynamics, which describes objects 10-30cm in size and 200-700g in mass.
- [The panel zooms back into Miss Lenhart's head. She is in the bottom-right corner of the panel.]
- Student (off-panel): That last one seems kind of limited.
- Miss Lenhart:Yeah, but over it's domain it's really precise. Absolutely nails squirrels and grapefruit.
- Miss Lenhart:Someday we hope to unify it with the other two.
Discussion
Explanatings!!! --DollarStoreBa'alConverse 02:37, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- E X P L A N A T E ! E X P L A N A T E ! E X P L A N A T E ! --DollarStoreBa'alConverse 02:42, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Incomprehension is futile - you will be explanated. 82.13.184.33 09:43, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
A black hole with the mass of the sun would have a Schwarzschild radius of 2.95 km. So it would take some significant revisions to theory to accommodate a grapefruit-sized object with that mass. Perhaps if it's digested by a squirrel, it gets smaller? BunsenH (talk) 03:32, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- hopefully quite a bit smaller, given the size of the squirrel in this example. KelOfTheStars! (talk) 05:15, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Not terribly impressed with the science chops of these "unifiers" if they can't work out what's gonna happen here. Hint: it's no happy dance for the squirrel. 2605:59C8:160:DB08:CDB6:FE7F:1FC9:524 16:28, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
Eastern Gray Squirrel.... measures 16-20 inches (approx. 40-50 centimeters) .... would be too big for Hyperacute Interdynamics (10-30cm (~4"-12")) to apply. Clearly a squirrel's tail can be neglected (see: spherical cow theory), being a very skinny (even rat-like) whip with bulky but insignificant fritz. The head and body length is from 23 to 30 cm (9.1 to 11.8 in) -- Wikipedia ---- Also, a bit north of Randall's place, we have lots of "Red Squirrels" which are significantly smaller than East Gray tree-rats. "Red squirrels are much smaller than greys and measure about 35centimetres including their tails and grow to around 350grams." - (YouTube) Our locals say "chipmunk" but I knew chipmunks from Sequoya Nat Park and these aint them. --PRR (talk) 06:45, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- I'm from Randall's area and we always called chipmunks chipmunks. Yes, we heard of red squirrels, but only saw gray squirrels and chipmunks. Massachusetts has a population with steadfast opinions. Doubt it? Try driving in Boston. 173.188.192.138 14:09, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Lots of red squirrels in SE Mass ("South Shore"). They don't like cities much. Very intelligent animals. 2605:59C8:160:DB08:CDB6:FE7F:1FC9:524 16:15, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Would the tail be excluded? Yes it's an extension, but it's certainly a part of the squirrel, and as such would contribute to it's length. --DollarStoreBa'alConverse 14:36, 9 December 2025 (UTC)

- I don't think there's a prblem. When the squirrel is sat passively, it fits (roughly) within the size constraints and is therefore fully explainable via Hyperacute Interdynamics. Once it starts running around and jumping, with its tail trailing behind it, the predictive ability of theory lessens (needn't be a cliff-edge of understanding, could even smoothly sustain near-perfect accuracy for the Black giant squirrel, at least at rest, just isn't so fundemnentally precise any more) but HI is entirely accurate again the moment it stops to nibble a nut.
- Though do squirrels eat grapefruit? (Solar-massive ones or otherwise.) I know someone left out pumpkin flesh, on a fallen tree in a woods near me, clearly from having created a Jack-O-Lantern for this year's Halloween (and apparently not thought to try making a few batches of pumpkin soup, for whatever reason), and it sat there for weeks (until it disintigrated) with no sign of either squirrels (American greys, unfortunately) or birds partaking of the 'feast'. 82.132.236.87 17:55, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Every year during Jack-o-Lantern season, squirrels are constantly trying to eat them even before they start rotting. I believe they're, once again, American Grays. They do indeed partake in feasts here, at least. --DollarStoreBa'alConverse 18:47, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Assuming, like me, that IP is in the UK... perhaps our 'invasive' Greys (hence the 'unfortunately'?) just haven't yet got used to the proliferation of pumpkins (we always used to make do with turnips, round here, until comparatively recent absorption of the US-style traditions). And the native reds are now far less likely to be near significant population so probably don't partake very much on such human bounty. 78.144.255.82 19:43, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Every year during Jack-o-Lantern season, squirrels are constantly trying to eat them even before they start rotting. I believe they're, once again, American Grays. They do indeed partake in feasts here, at least. --DollarStoreBa'alConverse 18:47, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
- Would the tail be excluded? Yes it's an extension, but it's certainly a part of the squirrel, and as such would contribute to it's length. --DollarStoreBa'alConverse 14:36, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
Should we think of a name for this young cueball? He's been around quite a lot but still anonymous.--Darth Vader (talk) 21:13, 9 December 2025 (UTC)
Where does the "three pillars" of physics in the current explanation come from? I thought it was just Relativity and Quantum mechanics? Isn't thermodynamics explained by Quantum mechanics? (IMO it also makes the joke funnier if there isn't a third pillar being deleted by hyperacute interdynamics, but a third pillar made up full cloth). (Wowitschris (talk) 21:58, 9 December 2025 (UTC))
I thought the third pillar would be classical physics? There doesn't seem to be an official or consensus definition of the pillars of physics (that I can find by googling), so the third may forever remain a mystery. Unless it was Hyperacute Interdynamics all along. 70.110.132.22 01:52, 10 December 2025 (UTC)