

Trump stands like a fucking broom 😂😂😂 #broomchallenge /hxcypNyoVpįeds did a sweep.
#BROOM STANDING UP BY ITSELF CRACKED#
I don’t have a broom but damn this shit crazy 😳 #broomchallenge /1hye5jdNpD Kind of creepy too When I did it I cracked up laughing for so long It just looks weird and funny, standing. When your Pastor gets a hold to the #broomchallenge /UhXZ3vqMQl
#BROOM STANDING UP BY ITSELF FULL#
While all your brooms are standing on their own, ours is out here packing full grown ass men through the air. 11 #broomchallenge #broomstickchallenge /igT2KKxVbe When nasa said it was the only day that brooms can stand up but it’s Feb. ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZSMPVYC February 12, 2020 The challenge has also spawned various iterations and memes by Twitterati. Fuck you NASA 😒 #broomchallenge /LJX3oyzaLp Center of mass means that all of the object's mass is even around one center or point. An astronomer named Phil Plait addressed the Broom Challenge in a tweet. It was supposed to only happen on this particular day, but scientists were quick to disprove this. While the challenge itself is harmless the hoax needed a clarification, just like the NASA satellite image of India that circulates every Diwali. An object's center of mass accounts for why objects, like a broom, can stand on its own. The theory behind the challenge was that on one certain day, the Earth’s gravitational pull was different enough to make the broom stand up by itself. ‘Gravitational pull’ doesn’t change depending on what day it is. National Air and Space Museum February 11, 2020 In fact, it’s simply to do with the fact that a broom’s centre of gravity is low. We're going to use "It's just physics" as a mic drop from now on. It is technically to do with gravity why the brooms can stand up, but it isn’t specific to any day or event. “It’s just physics”, NASA astronaut Alvin Drew and scientist Sarah Noble just went Ron Burgundy and dropped the facts! You don’t have to take my word for it, just take a look at NASA’s take on the challenge.Īstronaut Alvin Drew and scientist Sarah Noble respond to the #BroomstickChallenge, showing that basic physics works every day of the year - not just February 10th. This broom stick challenge is another stark reminder on why we should because "the only on this day" part is just a load of bullsh*t. Okay so NASA said today was the only day a broom can stand up on its own because of the gravitational pull.I didn’t believe it at first but OMG! 😭😭😭😭😭 /M0HCeemyGtĪs students of WhatsApp University, we quite often forget to verify information that we read on online media platforms. The premise of the challenge was to balance a broom vertically on its own under the influence of gravity, which apparently "according to NASA" was only possible on February 10.

They shoulda never gave us the internet 😂😂 #nasa #broomchallenge day, another challenge and well more fake news! Netizens were up and at it, rather had their brooms up and at it for the latest viral trend, the #broomchallenge or #broomstickchallenge. It often pops up around the vernal equinox (first day of spring), with people wrongly claiming that the equinox does something special to Earth's gravity allowing the broom trick to work. This broom hoax has been around for several years. The actual truth is that brooms have a low center of gravity which lets them be balanced on their bristles any day of the week. The truth is, brooms are sentient beings that can stand and walk all on their own-no wait, that's not right. Okay so NASA said today was the only day a broom can stand up on its own because of the gravitational pull.I didn’t believe it at first but OMG! 😭😭😭😭😭 /M0HCeemyGt It's a constant, measurable force first publicized by Issac Newton in 1687.īut still, online, some folks have been trying to convince others that something special about Earth's gravity in this moment is allowing brooms to stand on their own. Gravity isn't a spell from the wizarding world of Harry Potter. According to the viral tweet that started this trend, 'NASA said February 10 was the only day' this could happen because of the earth's gravitational pull. This time, people are trying to fool you into believing that something unique about the Earth's gravity is allowing brooms to stand up on their own. The 'Broom Challenge' took over Twitter on Monday following claims that on certain days of the year, a broom can stand upright by itself. RALEIGH - Another day, another hoax sweeping the internet.
