There have been many tales of people getting stuck in to fight the challenge of Covid-19, but none quite compare to the Australian astrophysicist who got four magnets trapped up his nose while trying to develop a device to prevent people touching their faces.
Daniel Reardon, a research fellow at Melbourne's Swinburne University, had to go to hospital after his efforts to build a necklace that sounded an alarm on facial contact went haywire.
The 27-year-old, who studies pulsars and gravitational waves, said he was trying to combat boredom as well as the coronavirus pandemic when he began experimenting with four powerful neodymium magnets.