Instructional Video5:30
The Business Professor

Concessions in a Negotiation

Higher Ed
This Video Explains Concessions in a Negotiation
Instructional Video8:14
Curated Video

Why The United States Gets So Many Powerful Tornadoes

9th - Higher Ed
Tornadoes are one of Earth's most incredible natural phenomena. But while every continent gets tornadoes to some degree, the United States in particular gets far more, at a higher frequency, to a greater degree of strength than almost...
Instructional Video1:51
Curated Video

New Technology: Radio-Opaque Windows for Enhanced Digital Security

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Researchers at the University of Warwick have developed a breakthrough technology that allows windows to selectively block signals from wireless networks, ensuring the security of sensitive digital information within office buildings. By...
Instructional Video6:43
Curated Video

Decoding the Photoelectric Effect: How It Works

9th - Higher Ed
The photoelectric effect is a phenomenon that occurs when light, consisting of photons, interacts with the inner structure of an atom. Photons carry a specific amount of energy proportional to their frequency, which is transferred to an...
Instructional Video3:15
Curated Video

The Photoelectric Effect : Light and Electrons

9th - Higher Ed
The photoelectric effect is a phenomenon where electrons are emitted from a material, typically a metal, when exposed to light. This effect supports the quantum theory of light and demonstrates the particle-like properties of...
Instructional Video3:23
Curated Video

Light Waves: Understanding the Wave Nature

9th - Higher Ed
We deal with light on a daily basis, and it has wave-like characteristics that are essential to many natural and technological processes. The wave nature of light aids in the explanation of a number of important optical phenomena,...
Instructional Video8:57
Curated Video

How to Make Your Message Memorable

10th - Higher Ed
When you communicate with your team or with your stakeholders, you must surely want to make your message memorable. But how? Here are 5 techniques, based on solid psychology. When you communicate with your stakeholders, your ideal...
Instructional Video4:28
Curated Video

De Broglie's Equation: Wave-Particle Duality

9th - Higher Ed
De Broglie's equation, formulated by Louis de Broglie in 1924, introduces the concept of wave-particle duality, suggesting that all matter exhibits both wave-like and particle-like properties. The equation is expressed as λ=h/p; λ is...
Instructional Video3:53
Curated Video

WHAT IS FREQUENCY OF WAVE

9th - Higher Ed
Frequency is the measurement of the total number of complete cycles or oscillations that a wave goes through in one second, and it is expressed in hertz (Hz). Frequency is a fundamental attribute that dictates the rate at which a wave...
Instructional Video2:49
Curated Video

Electromagnetic Waves: The Spectrum of Light

9th - Higher Ed
Electromagnetic waves are fundamental to understanding the nature of light and are oscillations of electric and magnetic fields that travel through space, carrying energy from one place to another. The spectrum of light is a small...
Instructional Video11:55
Astrum

Could We Be Detecting the Effects of "Hyperdrive" Travel?

Higher Ed
The most intriguing signals SETI ever detected - SHGb02+14a, BLC1 and fast radio bursts.
Instructional Video10:18
Veritasium

The Best Test of General Relativity (by 2 Misplaced Satellites)

9th - Higher Ed
A launch mishap led to the best experimental confirmation of gravitational redshift.
Instructional Video9:26
Astrum

The Vibrations of NASA's First Ever Marsquake

Higher Ed
An update for the NASA InSight mission to Mars. What has it seen and discovered so far?
Instructional Video4:22
Science ABC

Photoelectric Effect Explained in Simple Words for Beginners

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Photoelectric effect occurs when electromagnetic radiation above the threshold frequency of the given metallic surface, strikes the surface and releases electrons from it. This happens because light is made of massless particles called...
Instructional Video3:44
Science ABC

Lactose Intolerance: Why Many Asians Cannot 'Digest' Milk?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Lactose intolerance is quite common, especially in Asian countries. The reason behind this is gene-culture co-evolution. Lactose intolerance is the inability to digest lactose in milk because they lack the lactase enzyme. A 1981 study...
Instructional Video3:50
Science ABC

How Do Carrier Pigeons Know Where to Go?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Carrier pigeons have an innate ability known as magnetoreception, which enables them to detect and orient themselves based on magnetic fields. Humans lack this ability, but many bird species have the skill to varying degrees. Rock...
Instructional Video3:48
Science ABC

Does WiFi Have the Power to Travel Through Walls?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Wi-Fi signals can penetrate walls using radio waves in the frequency range of 2.4GHz or 5GHz. These wavelengths are small enough to pass through cracks and openings in walls. WiFi signals also reflect off objects, allowing the signals to...
Instructional Video3:52
Science ABC

Do Microwaves Interfere With WiFi Signals?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Yes. Microwaves and radio waves are physically the same, i.e. both are forms of electromagnetic radiation. Some microwave rays can leak out and interfere with WiFi signals. We are basically constantly surrounded by electromagnetic...
Instructional Video5:59
Science ABC

Climate Change and Global Warming: Explained in Simple Words for Beginners

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The term climate change is used to denote the long-term changes in the weather patterns in a given region. Another term often interchanged with climate change is global warming. Global warming is formally defined as a rise in Earth's...
Instructional Video3:39
Science ABC

Catatumbo Lightning: What Is The Beacon Of Maracaibo?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Beacon of Maracaibo (also called Maracaibo lightning/Catatumbo lightning) refers to the phenomenon of relentless lightning which goes on for nearly 300 days in a calendar year and for over 9 hours in each of those days. This seemingly...
Instructional Video3:13
Science ABC

Why Do Power Lines Buzz?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The buzzing sound that power lines produce is caused by corona discharge. Corona discharge is an electrical discharge that occurs when a fluid (like air) surrounding an electrically-charged conductor becomes ionized. In simple terms, its...
Instructional Video4:17
Science ABC

AM vs FM Radio: Which Modulation Rocks Your Ears?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Amplitude Modulation, commonly abbreviated as AM, is a common method of broadcasting radio signals. This method dates back to the 1870s, i.e., the time when we first discovered that information in the form of audio production can be...
Instructional Video0:38
Curated Video

Pitch

6th - 12th
The perceived frequency of a sound or musical note. A Twig Science Glossary Film. Key scientific terms defined in just 60 seconds using stunning images and concise textual definitions. Twig Science Glossary Films reinforce abstract...
Instructional Video0:35
Curated Video

Resonant frequency

6th - 12th
The frequency at which a material resonates, or naturally vibrates if given an initial impulse. A Twig Science Glossary Film. Key scientific terms defined in just 60 seconds using stunning images and concise textual definitions. Twig...