Instructional Video13:32
PBS

The Strange Universe of Gravitational Lensing

12th - Higher Ed
Niels Bohr, a Danish Physicist said “Everything we call real is made of things that cannot be regarded .” Is what we see perceived to be real or is it an illusion? In the world of our mind’s eye, light travels in a straight line. In...
Instructional Video11:22
PBS

How Black Holes Kill Galaxies

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are really only dangerous if you get too close. Ha, who am I kidding. It turns out they may be responsible for ending star formation across the entire universe. When we first realized that black holes could have masses of...
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 Video10:05
PBS

Should We Build a Dyson Sphere? | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
The Kepler telescope recently noticed a strange partial eclipse that some have speculated could be a Dyson Sphere. Are Dyson Sphere's possible? Are they practical? What other alternatives to futuristic energy capture do we have to choose...
Instructional Video13:10
PBS

Are Dark Matter And Dark Energy The Same?

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers are the worst at naming things. Dark energy AND dark matter? Who can remember which is which. But perhaps one astronomer has just fixed it, with a theory that says perhaps actually they are they same stuff.
Instructional Video13:49
PBS

Electroweak Theory and the Origin of the Fundamental Forces

12th - Higher Ed
Our universe seems pretty complicated. We have a weird zoo of elementary particles, which interact through very different fundamental forces. But some extremely subtle clues in nature have led us to believe that the forces of nature were...
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 Video8:25
PBS

The Trebuchet Challenge | Space Time

12th - Higher Ed
Kinetic and potential energy are defined as combinations of more basic quantities: position, velocity and mass. These combinations are chosen so that their sum is conserved. It’s actually remarkable that there’s any such combination of...
Instructional Video11:10
PBS

The Real Science of the EHT Black Hole

12th - Higher Ed
So, how do you take a picture of a black hole? The beast in question is the supermassive black hole in the center of this – the M87 elliptical galaxy. It has an estimated mass of several billion times that of the Sun, which gives it an...
Instructional Video9:10
PBS

Pulsar Starquakes Make Fast Radio Bursts? + Challenge Winners! | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
Fast Radio Bursts were puzzling physicist for quite some time. They were thought to be the result of large cataclysmic events such as supernovae, but this theory was proven wrong when it was discovered that they could repeat themselves....
Instructional Video12:21
PBS

What If Dark Matter Is Just Black Holes?

12th - Higher Ed
It may be that for every star in the universe there are billions of microscopic black holes streaming through the solar system, the planet, even our bodies every second. Sounds horrible - but hey, at least we’d have explained dark matter.
Instructional Video12:06
Be Smart

How Much Of You Is ACTUALLY Alive?

12th - Higher Ed
You’re alive right now… at least I’m pretty sure you are. But you’re not TOTALLY alive. Bits of you are always breaking down, being thrown out, and being replaced. Even right now, parts of you are dying. Some of your cells even died...
Instructional Video7:13
Be Smart

Where On Earth Do You Weigh The Least?

12th - Higher Ed
You may have heard that a kilogram of feathers weighs the same as a kilogram of steel, but that all depends on where you weigh them. This video is all about the difference between mass and weight, and how weirdly awesome Earth’s gravity...
Instructional Video8:20
PBS

The Future of Gravitational Waves

12th - Higher Ed
On September 14th, 2015 LIGO announced the first detection of a gravitational wave. This was hailed at the time as the dawn of gravitational wave astronomy. However that’s only true if the we ever detect another gravitational wave. Now...
Instructional Video13:26
PBS

Juno to Reveal Jupiter's Violent Past

12th - Higher Ed
On July 4th 2016, the Juno spacecraft entered orbit around the planet Jupiter after leaving earth five years ago. The Juno probe will tell us what lies inside the mysterious gas giant and with this information we’ll better understand the...
Instructional Video4:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Whoever builds something here will be rich beyond measure | Fabio Pacucci

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Since the 1950s, governments, companies, and researchers have been planting flags among the stars. But while it might seem like there's plenty of room in space, some pieces of celestial real estate are more valuable than others. As far...
Instructional Video6:49
SciShow

Meet Nell: The Skeleton Rocket That Flew

12th - Higher Ed
In 1926, Robert Goddard launched Nell — the very first (successful) liquid fuel rocket. But Nell wasn't built like other modern rockets, including a notable lack of casing and an exhaust nozzle suspended above the propellant tanks.
Instructional Video9:57
SciShow

Most Planets Don't Orbit Stars!?

12th - Higher Ed
Hunting for rogue planets is like hunting for an invisible needle in a haystack. But we're getting a much clearer view thanks to gravitational microlensing surveys. And it looks like there are a LOT more of them out there than we thought.
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow

Terran 1: The 3D Printed Rocket

12th - Higher Ed
Early this year, 3D printing showed off its space-age technology capabilities by printing most of a rocket that was launched into space.
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 Video6:56
SciShow

Our Solar System Might Have TWO Hidden Planets

12th - Higher Ed
After Pluto's demotion to dwarf planet in 2006, our solar system went from having nine planets to eight. But about a decade later, some astronomers proposed there was another planet, larger than Earth, hiding in the Kuiper Belt. And in...
Instructional Video2:49
MinuteEarth

Why Weather Forecasts Suck

12th - Higher Ed
There are two types of rain, and one of them is almost impossible to forecast.
Instructional Video1:27
MinutePhysics

Minute Physics: What is Gravity?

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode, we discuss the basic nature of gravity, one of the four fundamental forces in our universe.
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

The 8 Smartest People of the Year: 2013's Nobel Winners

12th - Higher Ed
Hank profiles this year's Nobel laureates in science, whose achievements have helped us understand questions as small as how our cells transport materials, and as big as why matter exists at all.