• Famed Magnetic Boy Is Probably Just Very Sticky
    18 replies, posted
[quote]A 7-year-old Serbian boy named Bogdan is attracting media attention for his apparent ability to attract other things, such as silverware, remote controls, plates and even a large frying pan. The objects seem to miraculously stick to the boy's skin. Bogdan's family claims he's magnetic, and an MSNBC reporter who filmed him in action says it's true. This isn't the first time a person has claimed to possess [URL="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/livescience/sc_livescience/storytext/famedmagneticboyisprobablyjustverysticky/40392682/SIG=11v4rim2c/*http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/how-do-magnets-work-0841/"]magnetic powers[/URL]. In fact, YouTube is strewn with demonstrations of bodily magnetism. But are they real? No. According to Benjamin Radford, renowned skeptic and managing editor of the magazine Skeptical Inquirer, there are several clues in the videos as to what's really going on. "A lot of times when you see these videos, the people are leaning back slightly," Radford told [URL="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/livescience/sc_livescience/storytext/famedmagneticboyisprobablyjustverysticky/40392682/SIG=116n2bkt6/*http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/"]Life's Little Mysteries[/URL]. "If there really is some magnetic attraction, the person should be able to lean over. If a magnetic force is overcoming gravity, we should see that. That's one strong clue that what we're seeing is not any sort of magnetism." Second, glass plates and a non-metallic remote control, as well as metal objects, are shown sticking to Bogdan's chest. "Glass is not magnetic. If a smooth piece of glass is sticking to him and a smooth piece of metal, what do those have in common? A very smooth surface. Not magnetism." That shows that quite a different physical effect is at play. "These people aren't magnetic, it's just that things that have smooth surfaces stick to skin," said Radford, adding, "Often these magnetic people have smooth skin and hairless chests." Bogdan, shirtless in the MSNBC video, is quite devoid of chest hair. According to Radford, scientists and paranormal skeptics have often tested alleged attractors to see whether they are generating magnetic fields, and they aren't. For example, Radford said, when a [URL="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/livescience/sc_livescience/storytext/famedmagneticboyisprobablyjustverysticky/40392682/SIG=123n3prve/*http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/how-does-a-compass-work-0980/"]compass[/URL] is hung around their necks, it doesn't point toward them, as it would if they were magnetic enough to attract spoons. Instead, it points due north to the Earth's magnetic pole. The real question, then, is why smooth objects like spoons and dishes stick to some people's skin. Sadie Crabtree of the James Randi Education Foundation (JREF), an organization that funds the scientific investigation of paranormal claims, said the effect is actually quite simple. "Skin is naturally slightly sticky, and some types of skin are probably stickier than others," Crabtree told Life's Little Mysteries. "But this is really no different than the trick where someone hangs a spoon from the end of their nose. It's just sticking through friction." [B]The Science of Stickiness[/B] To find out what's happening on the scale of atoms, Life's Little Mysteries turned to Gabor Somorjai, a leading surface scientist and chemistry professor at University of California, Berkeley. Though three physicists contacted previously had no idea what was happening, Somorjai described the effect as "very simple." "Your skin is covered with grease and oils," he told us. "You can [URL="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/livescience/sc_livescience/storytext/famedmagneticboyisprobablyjustverysticky/40392682/SIG=12oeuh20i/*http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/is-it-better-to-wash-with-antibacterial-soap-0761/"]clean them off with soap[/URL], but within less than a minute it will again be covered with oils." The grease on your skin has a very low surface energy, due to the fact that it is a liquid. "Its atoms are only connected with weak bonds," he said. By contrast, metals, with their strong, hard-to-break atomic bonds, have very high surface energies. "Things that have high surface energies want to go into a lower energy state. And so they want to be covered with a low surface-energy material," he said. And that means things like spoons stick to grease. Furthermore, the smoother the spoon (or other object), and the larger its surface area, the more contact it will make with the skin, and so the more it will stick. According to Elmar Kroner, a German materials scientist who has studied gecko feet, the elasticity of skin also affects its stickiness, and sweat makes it less elastic. "The sweat has a crucial function: With increasing wetness of the skin, its mechanical properties change. The skin becomes softer, and this reduces the elastically-stored energy of the skin and again leads to higher adhesion," Kroner told Life's Little Mysteries. So, sweaty skin is stickier. James Randi, the famous skeptic who founded the JREF, has in the past demonstrated that "magnetic" people's miraculous powers disperse when they are doused in talcum powder, a product that cuts grease. The science suggests that Bogdan is not magnetic, but rather just an exceptionally smooth, particularly sticky boy. [I]This story was provided by [URL="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/livescience/sc_livescience/storytext/famedmagneticboyisprobablyjustverysticky/40392682/SIG=115sq5aum/*http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com"]Life's Little Mysteries[/URL], a sister site to LiveScience.[/quote][/I] [URL="http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20110228/sc_livescience/famedmagneticboyisprobablyjustverysticky"]Source[/URL]
[insert dirty "sticky" joke here]
"Probably"? Either he is, or he isn't. Investigate this more dammit.
he's a sticky fucker who needs to take a shower : end of
wow he'll have acme problems later
he's a sticky fucker who needs to take a shower end of
Last thread a guy said the exact same thing.
[QUOTE=Mr.Dounut;28369314]wow he'll have acme problems later[/QUOTE] [IMG]http://i54.tinypic.com/jjpbq0.jpg[/IMG]
In the first thread I said let's cut this fucker open. I don't want to do that anymore, because now we know that the only thing that will come out is all that fast food he's been eating and wiping all over himself.
That's pretty gross.
Slugboy.
He has so much dirt on his skin that when someone puts an object on it, the dirt envelops the said object.
Grim.
I fuckin called it: [QUOTE=aydin690;28287055]When was the last time he took a shower? :colbert:[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=aydin690;28373132]I fuckin called it:[/QUOTE] when he was born
"I'm skeptical therefore I don't believe he is magnetic so he must be sticky." The article comes off by saying that and then spends the rest of the paragraphs telling what is sticky while not giving any conclusive proof. I was hoping for a good scientific article with more relevant details other than someone assumed he must be sticky so he must be.
Jeez, when I saw the original article on this kid I figured the stuff was sticking to him because of oily skin or something... Did that many people actually think he was magnetic?
wow he just got himself into a sticky situation.
If he was just really sticky then I can think of a many thousand facepunchers who are even more deserving of being such news
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