

Description: I had so much fun creating this pun on the maths term perimeter! Three cats in adjoining cardboard boxes seen from directly above, with measurement lines around the edges and the word 'purr-imeter'. The perimeter of a shape or group of shapes is the total 2D distance measured around the outside edge of the area.

Description: Different elements burn with a different coloured flame – here’s some cute examples with some of their element’s characteristics. Strontium, Calcium, Sodium, Boron, Arsenic, Potassium. My son loves science, and has a great book on the periodic table of elements, it was kind of fun to research this one :)

Description: The famously dramatic elephant toothpaste chemistry experiment! A conical flask containing a cute purple elephant, and overflowing with foam which has a toothpaste style stripe. The experiment demonstrates a chemical reaction involving hydrogen peroxide, washing up liquid and a catalyst e.g. potassium iodide solution or yeast, which produces a sudden expanding foam full of bubbles of gas. The molecule 2H202 and the resulting 2H20 and 02 molecules are represented in the image.

Description: A cute science pun (chemistry and physics)! A cation is an ion with more protons than elections giving it an overall positive charge. A dication has a +2 positive charge and a trication a +3 positive charge (but they are both cations, they can just be given special names indicating how much extra positive charge they have). Here's some cats and balls of wool to illustrate it :)

Description: A physics design showing a kawaii cute cylindrical battery, working very hard, lifting positive charge to a higher place (up the steps). (A kawaii cute blue cylindrical battery wearing an orange sweatband, carrying a positive charge and with a facial expression of effort and concentration, is climbing up some steps moving charge from a pile at the bottom of the steps to the top of the steps.)

Description: Flames behave differently in microgravity, they are spherical. This design shows a cute flame in Earth's gravity versus a flame in microgravity, with a speech bubble declaring "Physics is lit!" This physics design is inspired by the experiment by Paul Ronney, a combustion researcher.

Description: I created this after finding and binge watching the first series of A Discovery of Witches in January 2019. It's a fantastic TV series, I absolutely love it! The author of the trilogy of books the TV show is based on is a historian and we are introduced to the Order of the Knights of Lazarus (The Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem (Ordo Militaris et Hospitalis Sancti Lazari Hierosolymitani)) via the De Clermont family. As Dianna reads the artefact she finds, she seems to say that MDCL on it stands for Matthew De Clermont (Matthew Clairmont).