Instructional Video4:58
Be Smart

The Far Future of the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
SPOILERS: It doesn't end well.
Instructional Video3:45
SciShow

The Mysterious "Space Roar"

12th - Higher Ed
We here at SciShow like to start things off with a "Boom" for yet another season! Hank talks about the mystery behind the "Space Roar" and why it is we can't really hear it.
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

Space Particles Are Flying Through You Right Now!

12th - Higher Ed
Tiny remnants of extreme nuclear reactions in space are flying through your body right now. And astronomers are hunting them to learn more about some of the most energetic and violent objects in the universe.
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

To Study the Universe, This Town Still Bans Cell Phones

12th - Higher Ed
Part of being very far away from the rest of the universe is that the signals are very faint, so sometimes you need a nice, quiet spot to listen from.
Instructional Video7:29
PBS

LIGO's First Detection of Gravitational Waves!

12th - Higher Ed
Over 100 years after Einstein proposed his theory of general relativity, we are proud to announce that his final major prediction has been verified! Gravitational waves have officially been detected by LIGO! This is a huge deal and an...
Instructional Video15:38
TED Talks

Wendy Freedman: This telescope might show us the beginning of the universe

12th - Higher Ed
When and how did the universe begin? A global group of astronomers wants to answer that question by peering as far back in time as a large new telescope will let us see. Wendy Freedman headed the creation of the Giant Magellan Telescope,...
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

We May Have Just Found the Universe's Missing Baryonic Matter

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have finally found evidence to help solve the missing baryon problem, and they're pointing telescopes toward the Intergalactic Medium to figure it out.
Instructional Video4:42
TED Talks

Allan Adams: The discovery that could rewrite physics

12th - Higher Ed
On March 17, 2014, a group of physicists announced a thrilling discovery: the “smoking gun” data for the idea of an inflationary universe, a clue to the Big Bang. For non-physicists, what does it mean? TED asked Allan Adams to briefly...
Instructional Video3:52
SciShow

The Strange Case of the Himiko Blob

12th - Higher Ed
In 2009, a team of Japanese astronomers discovered Himiko Blob which is a very bright galaxy, its light originally wouldn’t be able to make it through the atmosphere. So why were those astronomers able to discover it?
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

MU69 is Flat, and No One Knows Why - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
MU69 seems to be much flatter than we thought and the Gaia space telescope can tell us where galaxies have been and, maybe, where they're going.
Instructional Video5:57
SciShow

The Deepest Sound in the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to X-ray telescopes, scientists in the 1970s found the first real evidence that black holes actually existed, and astronomer Andrew Fabian has used X-ray research to unlock incredible mysteries ever since, including a giant sound...
Instructional Video4:39
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How many universes are there? - Chris Anderson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The fact that no one knows the answer to this question is what makes it exciting. The story of physics has been one of an ever-expanding understanding of the sheer scale of reality, to the point where physicists are now postulating that...
Instructional Video4:54
SciShow

It's Official, Life Could Survive on Enceladus

12th - Higher Ed
Enceladus’ environment could totally be habitable for at least one real-world microbe and we just found the oldest supernova.
Instructional Video11:36
Crash Course

Dark Matter

12th - Higher Ed
Today on Crash Course Astronomy, Phil dives into some very dark matters. The stuff we can actually observe in the universe isn’t all there is. Galaxies and other large structures in the universe are created and shifted by a force we...
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

ALMA: What We've Learned from One of the Best Telescopes on Earth

12th - Higher Ed
Move over Hubble, ALMA sees what you can't!
Instructional Video3:50
SciShow

An Impossible Black Hole, and Finally Meeting Ceres

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space takes you to a distant, ancient black hole that … really shouldn’t be, and psyches you up for the Dawn spacecraft’s final approach to Ceres!
Instructional Video5:46
SciShow

How Slime Mold Is Tackling Mysteries of Cosmology - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
We might be able to use slime molds to help predict the shape of matter in the universe, and the Rosetta mission may have figured out why many comets seem to be missing a bunch of nitrogen.
Instructional Video8:35
PBS

Using Stars to See Gravitational Waves

12th - Higher Ed
Now that gravitational waves are definitely a thing, it's time to think about some of the crazy things we can figure out with them. In some cases we're going to need a gravitational wave observatory - in fact, we've already built one.
Instructional Video4:07
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How small are we in the scale of the universe? - Alex Hofeldt

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1995, scientists pointed the Hubble Telescope at an area of the sky near the Big Dipper. The location was apparently empty, and the whole endeavor was risky _ what, if anything, was going to show up? But what came back was nothing...
Instructional Video4:40
SciShow

The Mars Lander Crash: What Went Wrong?

12th - Higher Ed
Schiaparelli crashing into Mars wasn't exactly what the Exomars mission scientists were hoping for, but we're still going to get some useful information from the little probe's descent. And scientists have observed two of the brightest...
Instructional Video17:40
TED Talks

Andrew Connolly: What's the next window into our universe?

12th - Higher Ed
Big Data is everywhere — even the skies. In an informative talk, astronomer Andrew Connolly shows how large amounts of data are being collected about our universe, recording it in its ever-changing moods. Just how do scientists capture...
Instructional Video4:18
SciShow

“Do Fabulous Science”: Jane Rigby | Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomer Dr. Jane Rigby challenges the limits of the naked eye. Having influenced most famous telescopes that come to mind, her work is defined by breaking boundaries both physical and beyond.
Instructional Video4:37
SciShow

The Great Attractor: A Truly Massive Mystery

12th - Higher Ed
There's something out there SO massive that it's pulling on every object within hundreds of millions of light years. But we can't see it! So what DO we know? Today on SciShow Space, Reid Reimers tells us more about the Great Attractor.
Instructional Video7:19
TED Talks

TED: Our longing for cosmic truth and poetic beauty | Maria Popova

12th - Higher Ed
Linking together the histories of Henrietta Swan Leavitt, Edwin Hubble and Tracy K. Smith, poet and thinker Maria Popova crafts an astonishing story of how humanity came to see the edge of the observable universe. (Followed by an...