

Spaghetti Science And Mouth Taping Myths
10 snips Jul 10, 2025
Joseph Howlett, a math writer at Quanta Magazine, dives into the physics of spaghetti, revealing why it breaks into multiple pieces and the science behind perfecting cacio e pepe. Linda Lee, a physician and surgeon at Massachusetts Eye and Ear, discusses the trending mouth taping practice, exploring its purported benefits like improved sleep and breathing. She emphasizes the need for professional evaluation before jumping on wellness trends and critiques the influence of social media on health practices.
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Feynman's Spaghetti Obsession
- Richard Feynman loved to break spaghetti and observed it could never break into two pieces cleanly.
- He and colleagues spent the night breaking spaghetti, starting a decades-long physics curiosity.
Why Spaghetti Breaks Weirdly
- Spaghetti breaks into more than two pieces because tension distributes and causes multiple breaks.
- Twisting spaghetti relieves tension, allowing a clean break into two pieces.
Slurped Spaghetti Slaps Face
- Physicist George F. Carrier studied why slurped spaghetti often slaps the face.
- He explained the problem with physics of acoustic modes in long, bendy objects.