Instructional Video5:06
SciShow

The Milky Way May Have a Disk of Black Holes

12th - Higher Ed
Computer models are helping scientists on the hunt for small black holes and new data is giving us a better understanding of the universe’s largest explosions.
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

Meet Icarus: The Farthest Star We've Ever Seen

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve seen a distant star from another galaxy far, far away, and the Milky Way is growing, thanks to baby stars born in the outer edge of our galaxy’s disk.
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

Using Galaxy Clusters to Look Into the Past

12th - Higher Ed
Gravitational lensing has given us a look at a galaxy in the very, very distant cosmic past using x-ray light, and NASA finally got its ICON mission off the ground!
Instructional Video4:43
SciShow

The Universe Is Expanding... But Not Everywhere

12th - Higher Ed
The Universe is expanding which means distant galaxies are only moving farther away from us. So in the farthest future, will our night sky be empty?
Instructional Video10:21
PBS

When Quasars When Quasars Collide STJC

12th - Higher Ed
In this video, we discuss the reports about the detection of a pair of supermassive black holes orbiting only one light year apart from each other. Studying the dance of these giants should tell us a ton about how black holes grow.
Instructional Video4:12
SciShow

Fermi Bubbles Our Galaxy’s Giant Gamma Ray Mystery

12th - Higher Ed
Fermi bubbles are made up of gamma rays, but where they came from is still up for debate. Did they come from a star-forming region, or the black hole at the middle of our galaxy?
Instructional Video3:53
SciShow

Roswell & New Signals from Space

12th - Higher Ed
With news of radio signals from distant galaxies, a government agency that wants to investigate extra-terrestrial life, and the 66th anniversary of the Roswell Incident, this week has felt like a '90s science fiction melodrama. Hank's...
Instructional Video8:55
PBS

Why the Big Bang Definitely Happened

12th - Higher Ed
We pretty much know for sure that the universe was once extremely small, and extremely hot. And we know that something set it in motion, expanding rapidly and continuing to do-so today. But the actual moment of 'the Big Bang' is still a...
Instructional Video5:10
SciShow

We Just Found a Galaxy with Almost No Dark Matter

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have found a galaxy with almost no dark matter and we have finally solved the Leading Arm mystery!
Instructional Video4:31
SciShow

What Was the Hottest Thing Ever?

12th - Higher Ed
How hot can things really get?
Instructional Video5:48
SciShow

3 Ways the Milky Way Will Change During Your Lifetime

12th - Higher Ed
It’s easy to imagine that our galaxy is basically frozen in time from the perspective of a human lifespan, but in fact, the Milky Way is incredibly dynamic and will undergo some pretty amazing changes in only a few decades!
Instructional Video6:46
SciShow

That Galaxy With No Dark Matter It's Probably Not Real - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
A little over a year ago, we covered a mind-blowing discovery on SciShow Space News. Some researchers even suggested that, if this was confirmed, it would be one of the biggest astronomy findings in years. Except, as it turns out… that...
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

We Still Can't Find the First Stars in the Universe | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers looking farther back in time than ever before are giving us a better idea of what the early universe must have been like, and we've identified another of the mysterious ultraluminous X-ray pulsars.
Instructional Video7:18
TED Talks

Erika Hamden: What it takes to launch a telescope

12th - Higher Ed
TED Fellow and astronomer Erika Hamden leads the team building FIREBall, a telescope that hangs from a giant balloon at the very edge of space and looks for clues about how stars are created. She takes us inside the roller-coaster,...
Instructional Video6:25
TED Talks

TED: The death of the universe -- and what it means for life | Katie Mack

12th - Higher Ed
The universe started with a bang -- but how will it end? With astonishing visuals, cosmologist and TED Fellow Katie Mack takes us to the theoretical end of everything, some trillions of years in the future, in a profound meditation on...
Instructional Video6:06
SciShow

The Telescope That Revealed the X-Ray Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Some of the most exciting phenomena in space can’t be seen from Earth because our atmosphere soaks up high-energy light. That’s why NASA built Chandra, the most powerful X-ray telescope ever launched, and the observatory has helped...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Hanny's Voorwerp: The Mystery Blue Blob

12th - Higher Ed
In 2007, Hanny van Arkel noticed a blue blob next to a galaxy. Eight years later, scientists are still trying to figure out how it got there.
Instructional Video2:16
MinutePhysics

Do We Expand With The Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Do We Expand With The Universe
Instructional Video5:14
SciShow

How Many Galaxies Are There?

12th - Higher Ed
We've been trying to count the galaxies in the universe since the mid '90s, but our estimates change as our tools improve. So what does our current estimate really mean?
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

The Impossibly Huge Quasar Group

12th - Higher Ed
In 2013, astronomers reported that they'd found what was, at the time, the biggest thing in the known universe.
Instructional Video4:41
SciShow

What's Stopping the James Webb Space Telescope?

12th - Higher Ed
The James Webb Space Telescope is the most complex telescope we’ve ever sent into space. But, Webb is not, in fact, in space… yet.
Instructional Video5:54
SciShow

The Invisible Gas That Gave Us Galaxies

12th - Higher Ed
More than half of all the matter in the universe is out in the dark, 'empty space.' Although it's basically invisible, the intergalactic medium has a lot to tell us about the stuff we can see.
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

Where Do the Biggest Galaxies Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
Submillimeter galaxies are ancient, dense, massive galaxies with up to 10 times the number of stars in the Milky Way, and for a long time, scientists couldn’t even figure out how they existed in the first place.
Instructional Video4:14
SciShow

There’s a Rectangle Galaxy?

12th - Higher Ed
You're probably used to real galaxies having curves, except not all of them seem to have gotten the memo.