

Eggs will also stand up every day because the yolk moves to the bottom of the egg and balances it, according to CNN.
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You, me, we have to learn how to recognize stupidity and not pass it along.”Īnother urban legend claims that eggs will balance on the spring equinox, which is also not based on science. Schaefer added, “It’s a sociological question: How do these myths get started, and why are they propagating? If we pride ourselves on being in an information age, but most of the information is wrong, that bodes badly for society. The nature of science is to test reality.” Science is all about dispelling these old wives’ tales, these urban myths, these stupid Internet memes. You just have to know the trick.īradley Schaefer, an LSU physics and astronomy professor, told the LSU Reveille in 2012, “I can tell you very confidently that astronomically, the equinox has absolutely nothing to do with (it). The same brooms standing on end today will stand on end a week from now, a month from now, or four months from now, regardless of the positioning of the planets. For example, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn aligned most recently in 2016, but astronomers say such events have negligible effects on earthly objects. LiveAbout wrote:įor one thing, the spring equinox, which occurs every year in late March, has nothing to do with brooms standing on end.

One 2012 CNN story explained that the myth went viral on Facebook and Twitter and that the broom would stand up every day. Google and social media search results show the story usually pops up in March, around the actual spring equinox, not in February. The story went viral as recently as 2018, according to. This isn’t the first time claims have spread online that NASA said brooms can stand up on their own on the spring or vernal equinox. Vernal Equinox + standing brooms = faux magic CNN meteorologist Chad Myers makes a broom stand upright on its own but refutes a viral explanation for the phenomena.
