Instructional Video2:16
MinutePhysics

Relativity Isn't Relative

12th - Higher Ed
Relativity Isn't Relative
Instructional Video5:06
MinutePhysics

Tutorial - Rocket Science!

12th - Higher Ed
The basic physics behind how rockets work!
Instructional Video2:27
MinutePhysics

The Physics of Car Crashes

12th - Higher Ed
How is the chemical energy of gasoline transformed into kinetic energy of a moving car? And where does that kinetic energy go when the car crashes into something and stops moving?
Instructional Video2:54
MinutePhysics

How Do We Know The Universe Is Accelerating?

12th - Higher Ed
The universe is expanding – this we know from looking at red shifts of distant galaxies – but the acceleration of the universe's expansion is harder to measure. It requires measuring the change of recession velocity over time, and it's...
Instructional Video15:23
PBS

What If Dark Energy is a New Quantum Field?

12th - Higher Ed
What is Quintessence? Well we know that something is up with the way the universe is expanding - there’s some kind of anti-gravitational effect that’s causing the expansion to accelerate. We don’t know what it is - just that it competes...
Instructional Video16:42
PBS

Could LIGO Find MASSIVE Alien Spaceships?

12th - Higher Ed
Whenever we open a new window on the universe, we discover things that no one expected. Our newfound ability to measure ripples in the fabric of spacetime—gravitational waves—is a very new window, and so far we’ve seen a lot of wild...
Instructional Video8:05
PBS

100 Years of Relativity + Challenge Winners!

12th - Higher Ed
The results are in - on this weeks episode of Spacetime we reveal the answer to our Asteroid Challenge, as well as our T-shirt winners! Check out who saved the world!
Instructional Video13:21
PBS

Could the Universe End by Tearing Apart Every Atom?

12th - Higher Ed
The universe is expanding, and that expansion is accelerating. We don’t know what’s causing that acceleration, but that hasn’t stopped us from giving it a name. We call this unknown influence dark energy. The observed acceleration is,...
Instructional Video8:55
PBS

Does Time Cause Gravity?

12th - Higher Ed
We know that gravity must cause clocks to run slow on the basis of logical consistency. And we know that gravity DOES cause clocks to run slow based on many brilliant experiments. But I never explained WHY or HOW gravity causes the flow...
Instructional Video2:45
MinutePhysics

The Rocket & String Paradox

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about Bell's Spaceship Paradox of Special Relativity, wherein a pair of rockets (or spacecraft) connected by a weak thread accelerate with uniform acceleration, maintaining the same separation, and the question is: does the...
Instructional Video2:52
SciShow

Slingshot Spiders Put Fighter Pilots to Shame

12th - Higher Ed
There are all kinds of ways that a spider can catch its prey, but few species are as extreme as the slingshot spider!
Instructional Video10:52
PBS

The Unruh Effect

12th - Higher Ed
Worried about black holes? Consider this: Every time you accelerate - you generate an event horizon behind you. The more you accelerate away from it the closer it gets. Don't worry, it can never catch up to you, but the Unruh radiation...
Instructional Video12:13
PBS

Did Dark Energy Just Disappear?

12th - Higher Ed
Why are we talking about dark energy again? Because another team has just announced a new analysis of updated supernova data. They claim that the data are consistent with there being NO dark energy - no accelerating expansion. They...
Instructional Video3:34
MinutePhysics

Complete Solution To The Twins Paradox

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the famous 'Twins paradox' of special relativity, how time can appear to be faster for two different observers at the same time, and which twin really is older (or younger) - the one who stays on earth or the one who...
Instructional Video4:29
Bozeman Science

Inertial Mass

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how inertial mass is defined and measured. When a force is applied to an object or a system it will accelerate. Using Newton's Second Law of Motion (F=ma) you can calculate the inertial mass.
Instructional Video4:53
SciShow

Our Galaxy Could Be Full of Exoplanets with Oceans | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Earlier this spring NASA announced a new research model that predicts that ocean worlds are far from rare, and our galaxy might be full of them. And a new study examines evidence that Pluto may have had an underground ocean all along!
Instructional Video2:59
SciShow

Why Do Dogs Shake to Dry Off?

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone loves a slow motion video of a dog shaking to dry off, but what is the science behind it?
Instructional Video3:09
MinutePhysics

The Physics of Car Crashes

12th - Higher Ed
How is the chemical energy of gasoline transformed into kinetic energy of a moving car? And where does that kinetic energy go when the car crashes into something and stops moving?
Instructional Video4:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: If superpowers were real: Super speed - Joy Lin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What if super speed wasn't just the stuff of epic comic book stories? Is it scientifically possible to be super speedy? In this series, Joy Lin tackles six superpowers and reveals just how scientifically realistic they can be to us mere...
Instructional Video5:38
3Blue1Brown

Higher order derivatives | Footnote, Essence of calculus

12th - Higher Ed
What is the second derivative? Third derivative? How do you think about these?
Instructional Video1:38
MinutePhysics

2011 Nobel Prize - Dark Energy feat. Sean Carroll

12th - Higher Ed
Guest narrator Sean Carroll of Caltech describes dark energy and the acceleration of the universe, the discovery of which was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics on October 4th.
Instructional Video1:51
SciShow

Why Are Belly Flops So Painful

12th - Higher Ed
You botched your forward double somersault and biffed it hard on the water. Why does it have to hurt so bad?
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

Slingshot Spiders Put Fighter Pilots to Shame

12th - Higher Ed
There are all kinds of ways that a spider can catch its prey, but few species are as extreme as the slingshot spider!
Instructional Video5:50
Bozeman Science

Electric Force

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how electric force on an object inside a field can be calculated by multiplying the charge of the object (in C) times the electric field strength (in N/C).