Instructional Video10:01
SciShow

Why We'll Never Build a Perfect Clock

12th - Higher Ed
We can make clocks that keep accurate time for millions of years. We can also make clocks with such high resolution they tick one billion billion times per second. So why can't we make a clock that does both?
Instructional Video14:02
PBS

How We Know The Universe is Ancient

12th - Higher Ed
The universe is precisely 13.8 billion year old - or so our best scientific methods tell us. But how do you learn the age of the universe when there’s no trace left of its beginnings?
Instructional Video13:12
PBS

Building Black Holes in a Lab

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are about the worst subjects for direct study in the universe. But at this stage, it’s all we can do to convince ourselves of their existence. Actually studying the physics of real black holes is much, much harder. I mean, we...
Instructional Video12:33
PBS

Is Time Travel Impossible?

12th - Higher Ed
Time travel stories are cool because both the past and future are somehow more interesting that the present and because everyone wants a redo. But so far it appears we’re doomed to live consumed by regret in the eternal, boring present....
Instructional Video13:11
PBS

The NEW Warp Drive Possibilities

12th - Higher Ed
That Einstein guy was a real bummer for our hopes of a star-hopping, science-fiction-y future. His whole “nothing travels faster than light” rule seems to ensure that exploration of even the local part of our galaxy will be an...
Instructional Video17:34
PBS

What If The Universe Is Math?

12th - Higher Ed
In his essay “The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics”, the physicist Eugine Wigner said that “the enormous usefulness of mathematics in the natural sciences is something bordering on the mysterious”. This statement was inspired by...
Instructional Video12:30
PBS

Did Time Start at the Big Bang?

12th - Higher Ed
Our universe started with the big bang. But only for the right definition of “our universe”. And of “started” for that matter. In fact, probably the Big Bang is nothing like what you were taught. A hundred years ago we discovered the...
Instructional Video13:38
SciShow

The Weight of “Nothing” Could Mean Everything (to Physics)

12th - Higher Ed
Deep in a Sardinian mine, researchers are constructing an experiment that hopes to solve what's known as The Worst Prediction In The History of Physics, and pin down the true identity of dark energy.
Instructional Video5:15
MinutePhysics

General Relativity Explained in 7 Levels of Difficulty

12th - Higher Ed
This video covers the General theory of Relativity, developed by Albert Einstein, from basic simple levels (it's gravity, curved space) through to the concepts of how curved spacetime is represented by psuedo-Riemannian manifolds with...
Instructional Video4:53
SciShow

Why Protons Are Still Such a Mystery to Scientists

12th - Higher Ed
Protons make up most of the regular matter int he universe, but we're still figuring out a few of their quirks... Or quarks. Join Hank Green and learn why protons are still so mysterious to scientists, and what we've discovered about...
Instructional Video13:37
PBS

Why String Theory is Right

12th - Higher Ed
Some see string theory as the one great hope for a theory of everything - that it will unite quantum mechanics and gravity and so unify all of physics into one glorious theory.
Instructional Video12:03
PBS

Horizon Radiation

12th - Higher Ed
Learn about Horizon radiation and why it's essential for us to understand as we continue our journey towards the Unruh Effect and Hawking Radiation.
Instructional Video11:11
PBS

Are the Fundamental Constants Changing?

12th - Higher Ed
The laws of physics are the same everywhere in the universe. At least we astrophysicists hope so. After all, it's hard to unravel the complexities of distant parts of the universe if we don't know the basic rules. But what if this is...
Instructional Video5:09
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Newton's three-body problem explained | Fabio Pacucci

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 2009, researchers ran a simple experiment. They took everything we know about our solar system and calculated where every planet would be up to 5 billion years in the future. They ran over 2,000 simulations, and the astonishing...
Instructional Video24:45
3Blue1Brown

Winding numbers and domain coloring

12th - Higher Ed
An algorithm for solving continuous 2d equations using winding numbers.
Instructional Video24:44
3Blue1Brown

Solving 2D equations using color, a story of winding numbers and composition

12th - Higher Ed
An algorithm for numerically solving certain 2d equations. Even though we described how winding numbers can be used to solve 2d equations at a high level, it's worth pointing out that there are a few details missing for if you wanted to...
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 Video12:08
3Blue1Brown

Inverse matrices, column space and null space: Essence of Linear Algebra - Part 7 of 15

12th - Higher Ed
How do you think about the column space and null space of a matrix visually? How do you think about the inverse of a matrix?
Instructional Video5:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is the universe expanding into? - Sajan Saini

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The universe began in a Big Bang nearly fourteen billion years ago, and has been expanding ever since. But how does the universe expand and what is it expanding into? Sajan Saini explains the existing theories around the Big Bang and...
Instructional Video7:21
PBS

Is The Alcubierre Warp Drive Possible?

12th - Higher Ed
Inspired by Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek, physicist Miguel Alcubierre set out to transform one of the cornerstones of science fiction iconography, the Warp Drive, into reality. But is it even possible? Can we "warp" the fabric of reality...
Instructional Video2:52
MinutePhysics

The Higgs Boson, Part I

12th - Higher Ed
The Higgs Boson. What more need be said?
Instructional Video11:51
PBS

Solving the Impossible in Quantum Field Theory

12th - Higher Ed
The equations of quantum field theory allow us to calculate the behaviour of subatomic particles by expressing them as vibrations in quantum fields. But even the most elegant and complete formulations of quantum physics - like the Dirac...
Instructional Video12:08
3Blue1Brown

Inverse matrices, column space and null space | Essence of linear algebra, chapter 6

12th - Higher Ed
How do you think about the column space and null space of a matrix visually? How do you think about the inverse of a matrix?
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

How We Learned Black Holes Actually Exist | 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know Einstein never thought we’d find actual black holes in space? It took decades of research to show black holes are physically possible, and some of the scientists behind that research were honored this year with the Nobel...