Instructional Video8:11
SciShow

8 Lesser-Known, Useful Elements

12th - Higher Ed
There are 118 elements on the periodic table, but it seems like only a handful of them get any attention. But just because you haven't heard of an element doesn't mean that it isn't a vital part of everyday life.
Instructional Video5:39
Bozeman Science

Conservation of Charge in Reactions

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the charge is conserved in nuclear reactions. When elementary particles are created or destroyed in a reaction the net change in charge will remain constant. Alpha, beta -, and beta+ decay are all...
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

3 Brand New Colors That Scientists Discovered

12th - Higher Ed
For millennia, we mostly had to make do with natural pigments and dyes, but in the last 300 years or so, chemical synthesis has revolutionized the colors of our world.
Instructional Video4:17
SciShow

The Search for Antimatter

12th - Higher Ed
If you don't have any idea what antimatter is, you don't have to feel bad - the brightest minds in the world have only recently begun to understand what it is and how it works. Hank gives us the run down on what we know about antimatter,...
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

Antimatter Light Spectrum Discovered!

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists were able to measure the emission lines of antimatter! And we may have some new clues about how dinosaurs lost their teeth on the way to becoming birds.
Instructional Video10:08
Crash Course

Redox Reactions: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
All the magic that we know is in the transfer of electrons. Reduction (gaining electrons) and oxidation (the loss of electrons) combine to form Redox chemistry, which contains the majority of chemical reactions. As electrons jump from...
Instructional Video12:05
Crash Course

Carboxylic Acid Derivatives & Hydrolysis Reactions: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Esters have a wide range of uses, from giving perfumes and colognes their fragrances, to preventing diseases like scurvy. Vitamin C, that scurvy preventing antioxidant, is derived from carboxylic acids, a class of organic compounds we’ve...
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

A Plastic That Conducts Electricity?

12th - Higher Ed
Plastics usually stop electricity in its tracks, but scientists have figured out a way to keep the electrons flowing.
Instructional Video9:55
Crash Course

The Nucleus: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Hank does his best to convince us that chemistry is not torture, but is instead the amazing and beautiful science of stuff. Chemistry can tell us how three tiny particles - the proton, neutron and electron - come together in trillions of...
Instructional Video3:52
SciShow

Do You Need a Copper Pot?

12th - Higher Ed
Some chefs swear by copper pots and pans, but they are much more expensive than other materials. Are they worth it? Well, it all comes down to electrons!
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

Why Scientists Are Cooking Ancient Pots

12th - Higher Ed
Unlocking the mysteries of ancient ceramics is a bit complicated. Radiometric dating tells us the age of the clay, but when was it first shaped by a human? We can find out by blasting it with heat again!
Instructional Video10:11
Crash Course

Electronic Computing: Crash Course Computer Science

12th - Higher Ed
So we ended last episode at the start of the 20th century with special purpose computing devices such as Herman Hollerith’s tabulating machines. But as the scale of human civilization continued to grow as did the demand for more...
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

The 17+ Different Kinds of Ice!

12th - Higher Ed
Ice is ice, right? Wrong! From the vacuum of deep space to the inside of ice giant planets, ice gets stretched and squished into way more forms than what we find here on Earth.
Instructional Video5:17
Bozeman Science

Photons

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how light travels in photons which can be described as both particles and waves. Einstein showed that photons can be described as particles using the photoelectric effect to show that the energy of a...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Why Haven't We Built a Better Battery?

12th - Higher Ed
Improving batteries is a tough problem, but it’s also an important one because in many ways the future of our planet also depends on the future of batteries. Luckily, scientists are on the case, figuring out ways to give this essential...
Instructional Video2:22
SciShow

Why Are Metals Shiny

12th - Higher Ed
We can all appreciate pretty shiny things, but what makes them shiny?
Instructional Video5:27
TED-Ed

Who decides how long a second is? | John Kitching

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1967, researchers gathered to answer a long-running scientific question: just how long is a second? It might seem obvious at first. A second is the tick of a clock, the swing of a pendulum, the time it takes to count to one. But how...
Instructional Video9:54
Crash Course

Polar & Non-Polar Molecules: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Molecules come in infinite varieties, so in order to help the complicated chemical world make a little more sense, we classify and categorize them. One of the most important of those classifications is whether a molecule is polar or...
Instructional Video5:22
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The 2,400-year search for the atom - Theresa Doud

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How do we know what matter is made of? The quest for the atom has been a long one, beginning 2,400 years ago with the work of a Greek philosopher and later continued by a Quaker and a few Nobel Prize-winning scientists. Theresa Doud...
Instructional Video3:04
MinutePhysics

Quantum SHAPE-SHIFTING: Neutrino Oscillations

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to the Heising-Simons Foundation for supporting this video: http://www.heisingsimons.org CRAZY Double Pendulum Footnote: https://youtu.be/gbJYK7q5ejY This video is about the phenomenon of neutrino oscillations, which is where...
Instructional Video13:08
Crash Course

Aromaticity, Hückel's Rule, and Chemical Equivalence in NMR: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve been paying attention so far in this series, you’ve probably heard of benzene. This molecule is flat, cyclic, and belongs to a special class of compounds known as aromatics. In this episode of Crash Course Organic Chemistry,...
Instructional Video11:06
Crash Course

More EAS - Electron Donating and Withdrawing Groups: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
In the previous episode we discussed what happens when we use electrophilic aromatic substitution to add a group to a benzene ring, but what happens when you try to add even more groups? Well, things get a little more complicated. In...
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

Diamagnetism: How to Levitate a Frog

12th - Higher Ed
You might associate levitation with magic, but science has its own version.
Instructional Video3:21
SciShow

Strong Interaction: The Four Fundamental Forces of Physics #1b

12th - Higher Ed
Hank continues his primer on the strongest of the four fundamental interactions of physics, the strong interaction. Today he talks about the nuclear force and a force carrier called a pion.