The best-known version Parnell poured a heated sample of the pitch into a sealed
funnel and allowed it to settle for three years. In 1930, the seal at the neck of the funnel was cut, allowing the pitch to start flowing. A glass dome covers the funnel and it is placed on display outside a lecture theatre. Each droplet forms and falls over a period of about a
decade. Between 1961 and 2013, the experiment was supervised by John Mainstone . The seventh drop fell at approximately 4:45 p.m. on 3 July 1988, while the experiment was on display at Brisbane's
World Expo 88. However, apparently no one witnessed the drop fall itself; Mainstone had stepped out to get a drink at the moment it occurred. This experiment is recorded in
Guinness World Records as the "world's longest continuously running laboratory experiment", and it is expected there is enough pitch in the funnel to allow it to continue for at least another hundred years. This experiment is predated by two other (still-active) scientific devices, the
Oxford Electric Bell (1840) and the
Beverly Clock (1864), but each of these has experienced brief interruptions since 1937. The experiment was not originally carried out under any special controlled atmospheric conditions, meaning the viscosity could vary throughout the year with fluctuations in
temperature. Sometime after the seventh drop fell (1988), air conditioning was added to the location where the experiment takes place. The lower average temperature has lengthened each drop's stretch before it separates from the rest of the pitch in the funnel, and correspondingly the typical interval between drops has increased from eight years to 12–13 years. In October 2005, Mainstone and Parnell were awarded the
Ig Nobel Prize in physics, a parody of the
Nobel Prize, for the pitch drop experiment. Mainstone subsequently commented: The experiment is monitored by a
webcam but technical problems prevented the November 2000 drop from being recorded. Custodianship then passed to Andrew White. The ninth drop touched the eighth drop on 12 April 2014; however, it was still attached to the funnel. On 24 April, Professor White decided to replace the beaker holding the previous eight drops before the ninth drop fused to them (which would have permanently affected the ability of further drops to form). While the bell jar was being lifted, the wooden base wobbled and the ninth drop snapped away from the funnel.
Timeline Timeline for the University of Queensland experiment: ==Trinity College Dublin experiment==