SciencePhysics

Genius Gallery: Match the Brain (Part 1)

Can you pin the scientist to the pixel in 40 seconds?

Genius Gallery: Match the Brain (Part 1)
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About This Quiz

Level 1: household-name geniuses.

Level 2: faculty-lounge headshots that stump post-docs.

Level 3: stray apples, sparking coils, napkin rocket doodles—spot the signature prop and match the mind.

Pick wrong and it’s sodium-in-water chaos; pick right and you’re dropping Newton facts at happy hour.

No lab coat required—just hit start and let the brainiacs out to play.

1/30

1. Isaac Newton

[B] Isaac Newton | Guy who turned an apple bonk into universal gravitation, invented calculus during a plague lockdown, and split white light just to see what would happen.

2/30

2. Leonhard Euler

[A] Leonhard Euler | Swiss mathematician who published so prolifically that academics joked he could calculate faster than most people could read.

3/30

3. Gottfried Leibniz

[B] Gottfried Leibniz | Calculus co-creator who invented binary numbers three centuries before computers needed them, plus designed a mechanical calculator that actually worked.

4/30

4. Carl Friedrich Gauss

[C] Carl Friedrich Gauss | Child prodigy who corrected his father's payroll at age three and later proved you could draw a perfect 17-sided polygon with just compass and straightedge.

5/30

5. Michael Faraday

[A] Michael Faraday | Bookbinder's apprentice who became the wizard of electromagnetic induction and invented the electric motor basically by playing with magnets and wire.

6/30

6. Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen)

[D] Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen) | Medieval scientist who figured out how eyeballs work by sitting in a dark room for three years experimenting with light and lenses.

7/30

7. Galileo Galilei

[C] Galileo Galilei | First person to point a telescope at Jupiter and discover it had its own moons, effectively blowing everyone's geocentric minds in 1610.

8/30

8. Nikola Tesla

[D] Nikola Tesla | Serbian inventor who could visualize complete inventions in his head, talked to pigeons, and made lightning bolts for fun while revolutionizing electrical systems.

9/30

9. Marie Skłodowska-Curie

[A] Marie Skłodowska-Curie | Only person to win Nobel Prizes in two different sciences, whose notebooks remain too radioactive to handle without protective gear even today.

10/30

10. Albert Einstein

[C] Albert Einstein | Patent clerk who casually revolutionized physics in his spare time, proving that time is relative but his wild hair was absolutely constant.

11/30

11. Srinivasa Ramanujan

[B] Srinivasa Ramanujan | Self-taught mathematician who claimed a Hindu goddess whispered formulas in his dreams, producing theorems that still puzzle mathematicians today.

12/30

12. Louis Pasteur

[D] Louis Pasteur | French chemist who saved the wine industry, invented vaccines, and proved germs exist, all while being partially paralyzed from a stroke.

13/30

13. Johannes Kepler

[B] Johannes Kepler | Astronomer who spent eight years doing math by hand to prove planets move in ellipses, not circles, disappointing circle enthusiasts everywhere.

14/30

14. Liu Hui

[A] Liu Hui | Chinese mathematician who calculated pi to five decimal places using only polygons and determination, centuries before calculators were even imagined.

15/30

15. Max Planck

[A] Max Planck | Reluctant revolutionary who accidentally founded quantum physics while trying to solve a light bulb problem, then spent years being uncomfortable with his discovery.

16/30

16. Augustin-Louis Cauchy

[D] Augustin-Louis Cauchy | French mathematician who wrote so many papers that journals had to set page limits, basically inventing the academic publishing crisis single-handedly.

17/30

17. James Clerk Maxwell

[B] James Clerk Maxwell | Scottish physicist who unified electricity and magnetism into four elegant equations, plus took the world's first color photograph as a side project.

18/30

18. Avicenna (Ibn Sina)

[C] Avicenna (Ibn Sina) | Persian polymath whose medical textbook was used in European universities for 600 years, longer than most modern textbooks stay relevant for 6 months.

19/30

19. Hermann von Helmholtz

[D] Hermann von Helmholtz | German scientist who invented the ophthalmoscope to peek inside eyeballs and measured the speed of nerve signals using frog legs and electricity.

20/30

20. Dmitri Mendeleev

[B] Dmitri Mendeleev | Russian chemist who arranged elements by atomic weight, left gaps for undiscovered ones, and correctly predicted their properties like a chemical fortune teller.

21/30

21. Robert Koch

[A] Robert Koch | German doctor who finally proved germs cause disease by growing anthrax bacteria and showing they could infect healthy animals, settling centuries of medical debate.

22/30

22. Ernest Rutherford

[C] Ernest Rutherford | New Zealand physicist who discovered the atomic nucleus by shooting particles at gold foil and being shocked when some bounced straight back.

23/30

23. Nicolaus Copernicus

[B] Nicolaus Copernicus | Polish astronomer who suggested Earth orbits the sun, then wisely waited until he was literally dying to publish this church-angering idea.

24/30

24. Georg Bernhard Riemann

[C] Georg Bernhard Riemann | German mathematician whose geometry of curved spaces seemed useless until Einstein needed it to explain how gravity bends spacetime.

25/30

25. Zhang Heng

[A] Zhang Heng | Chinese inventor who built the world's first seismoscope using bronze dragons and toads, detecting earthquakes hundreds of miles away in 132 CE.

26/30

26. Blaise Pascal

[D] Blaise Pascal | French prodigy who invented a mechanical calculator at 19 to help his tax-collector dad, then pioneered probability theory to help gamblers.

27/30

27. Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi

[D] Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi | Persian scholar whose name became "algorithm" and whose algebra book title gave us the word "algebra," basically naming half of computer science.

28/30

28. Jules Henri Poincaré

[C] Jules Henri Poincaré | French mathematician who discovered chaos theory by accident while studying planetary orbits and realizing tiny changes create massive unpredictability.

29/30

29. Abu Rayhan al-Biruni

[B] Abu Rayhan al-Biruni | Medieval scholar who calculated Earth's radius using trigonometry and a mountain, getting remarkably close with just medieval tools and clever thinking.

30/30

30. Isambard Kingdom Brunel

[A] Isambard Kingdom Brunel | Victorian engineer who built impossible bridges, revolutionary ships, and once got a coin stuck in his throat while performing magic tricks for children.

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Genius Gallery: Match the Brain (Part 1)

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