First Seen
2023-09-19T16:56:34+00:00
simple-description (qwen3.5_2b-q8_0)
The image "How dense are the planets?" is an internet meme that plays on the absurdity of using "Grains per Cubic Centimeter" to measure planetary density.
Here is the breakdown:
- Context: It is an infographic answering the question "How dense are the planets?" by presenting a bar graph of planetary mass densities.
- The Joke: The label on the vertical axis is "Grains per Cubic Centimeter."
- The Punchline: The joke is that a "Grain" is an incredibly small unit of mass (approximately 1/24th of a gram). Therefore, a density of "5.42 grains per cubic centimeter" sounds like a comical or meaningless number because 5.42 grains is just a tiny speck of matter. It highlights how much smaller the unit is than a normal measurement, making the numbers seem insignificant for such a massive object.
The meme effectively turns a legitimate scientific unit for density into a joke about how small the unit of measurement is.
simple-description (llama3.2-vision_11b)
The meme is a humorous comparison of the sizes of celestial bodies in our solar system, with a focus on the density of each planet. The meme states "How dense are the planets?" and lists the planets in our solar system, with their densities in grams per cubic centimeter. The meme is a lighthearted way to compare the densities of the planets, with a focus on the absurdity of the differences between them.
simple-description (llama3.2-vision)
This meme is a humorous comparison of the density of various planets in our solar system. The image shows a graph with the names of the planets, and their corresponding densities in grams per cubic centimeter. The text "How dense are the planets?" is written at the top of the image, and the caption "In grams per cubic centimeter" is written on the left side of the graph.