Instructional Video4:00
Periodic Videos

Boron

9th - Higher Ed Standards
California includes a city named Boron, after the element. An instructive video in a longer series on chemical elements introduces the beautiful green flame of boron. It discusses the properties, applications, and unique place in history...
Instructional Video10:29
Periodic Videos

Lithium

9th - Higher Ed Standards
A knife cuts lithium easily, even though it is a metal. The applications, properties, and history of lithium appear in a video about chemical elements. It highlights a simple flame and large bombs as well as everyday batteries and...
Instructional Video2:55
Veritasium

Types of Radiation

9th - Higher Ed Standards
While there are many different types of radiation, the three most commonly studied include alpha, beta, and gamma. Part of a larger Veritasium playlist, the video explains the discovery of radiation as well as the exploration of...
Instructional Video2:17
Veritasium

Thomson's Plum Pudding Model of the Atom

9th - 12th Standards
JJ Thomson discovered atoms are made up of things, which he called electrons. The video in the Vertasium playlist explains Thomson's model of the atom, known as the plum pudding model. It presents the new knowledge Thomson wanted to...
Instructional Video5:04
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Socratica

Chemistry: What Is an Ionic Bond?

9th - 12th Standards
Teach your class all they want to know about ionic bonds. An engaging video, part of the Socratica "Chemistry Lessons" playlist, explains what ionic bonds are and how they form. It describes multiple examples of ionic bonds and...
Instructional Video5:43
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Socratica

Chemistry: Gay-Lussac's Law (Gas Laws)

9th - 12th Standards
If an aerosol can lands in a fire, it explodes due to Gay-Lussac's Law. A video from a chemistry playlist explains Gay-Lussac's Law and the relationship between pressure and temperature of gases. It includes two guided practice problems...
Instructional Video5:15
PBS

The Biggest Thing That Ever Flew

6th - 12th Standards
Imagine a reptile the size of a giraffe that flies across oceans. This reptile, quetzalcoatlus, existed, and scientists continue to learn more about this fascinating creature. The video, part of the Eons series, explains where the...
Instructional Video5:52
PBS

The Story of Saberteeth

6th - 12th Standards
Smilodon's fangs averaged 18 cm long. An engaging video explains what saberteeth are and how they evolved. It details the theories about how species used saberteeth and why cats don't have them today. 
Instructional Video5:03
PBS

The Tully Monster and Other Problematic Creatures

6th - 12th Standards
Many reference mysterious fossils as belonging to monsters, but clearly they existed. A science series presents a video on problematic creatures. It specifically focuses on the tully monster, which, despite many fossils, has yet to...
Instructional Video9:32
PBS

The Higgs Mechanism Explained

10th - Higher Ed Standards
In 2012, physicists discovered a new particle, the Higgs Boson. This particle, predicted by scientists for years, finally answered many questions in quantum field theory. A video in PBS Space Time's "The Origin and Matter of Time"...
Instructional Video10:24
PBS

The Real Meaning of E=mc2

10th - Higher Ed Standards
Einstein proved that matter is energy. A video in Space Time's The Origin of Matter and Time playlist details the meaning of the equation E = mc^2 by converting it back to the original m = E/c^2. The advanced video...
Instructional Video10:48
PBS

The True Nature of Matter and Mass

10th - Higher Ed Standards
Scientists know mass is energy, but what is energy? An engaging Space Time video delves into the topic as part of its The Origin of Matter and Time playlist. From quarks and gluons with no mass to the gravitational effect, the true...
Instructional Video9:31
PBS

When Time Breaks Down

10th - Higher Ed Standards
Some define time by motion, but how exactly does this work? Space Time added a video as part of its The Origin of Matter and Time playlist to explore just this question. It breaks down the relationships between matter, motion, and time....
Instructional Video12:32
PBS

The Origin of Matter and Time

10th - Higher Ed Standards
Time does not exist as a universal constant, yet it can be defined as a concrete reality. These concepts and more provide the inspiration for an episode of Space Time's larger series of the same name. It discusses causal order, the...
Instructional Video12:58
PBS

What’s Wrong with the Big Bang Theory?

10th - Higher Ed Standards
A video highlights the contradictions in the Big Bang Theory and then discusses the need for a unifying theory of everything. Space Time presents an enlightening video as part of a larger series on Cosmology.
Instructional Video12:35
PBS

Why the Big Bang Definitely Happened

10th - Higher Ed Standards
According to Space Time, many different studies prove the Big Bang happened. Part of a larger Cosmology playlist, it discusses the common arguments against and the newest science supporting the theory.
Instructional Video13:41
PBS

How Cosmic Inflation Flattened the Universe

10th - Higher Ed Standards
What if time didn't begin with the big bang? Big Bang doesn't completely answer questions about the beginning of the universe, but cosmic inflation theory holds up better according to scientists in this video. Cosmic inflation fits so...
Instructional Video9:37
PBS

What Happens at the Edge of the Universe?

10th - Higher Ed Standards
The cosmic even horizon of the universe is closer to us than the particle horizon. Space Time's Cosmology playlist tackles this and other complex concepts about the universe. The video discusses how the scientists define the edge of the...
Instructional Video7:10
PBS

Cosmic Microwave Background Explained

10th - Higher Ed Standards
As part of their Cosmology series Space Time presents a video that explains the history of electromagnetic waves and the shifting and expanding wavelengths. It finishes by exploring cosmic microwave background radiation. 
Instructional Video13:10
PBS

Will the Universe Expand Forever?

10th - Higher Ed Standards
Scientists from Newton to Friedmann debated the future of the universe. Many scientists thought the universe might collapse on itself in a big crunch, but new mathematical models finally gave us an official answer. The Space Time video,...
Instructional Video6:37
PBS

How Do You Measure the Size of the Universe?

10th - Higher Ed Standards
The universe is 90 billion light years in diameter. How do scientists measure something so huge? Space Time explains the process as part of its larger Cosmology playlist. The video addresses the steps to solving the puzzle as well as how...
Instructional Video6:51
Be Smart

Doomsday Machines

6th - 12th Standards
Nuclear weapons changed war forever. Scientists now know that a few of these weapons have the ability to change the climate and cause a mass extinction. Watch a video that details the ways these machines work—and the implications that...
Instructional Video5:14
Be Smart

How An Igloo Keeps You Warm

6th - 12th Standards
The idea of staying warm by surrounding yourself with ice confuses many—but it works! An informative video explains the science behind this as part of a larger playlist. It details the inspiration from animal shelters and how people make...
Instructional Video5:29
Be Smart

The Cheerios Effect

6th - 12th Standards
Why does cereal clump together in milk? Scientists answered this question in 2005 with the help of physics and math. A video explains the relationship between buoyancy, surface tension, and the meniscus. It teaches how to attract or...