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Clean White Plexus fantasy abstract technology and engineering background with original organic motion with moving numbers, lines and dots Plexus network background lines seamless loop animation
Abstract polygonal Digital Concept Geometrical Polygon Plexus Fractals Moving low poly Technologies Minimalist design element Seamless loop background for corporate business presentation
Curated Video
Nanotechnology improves battery performance
LEAD IN:A Prague-based tech company is using nanotechnology to create more efficient and long-lasting batteries. Improving batteries' performance is key to the development and success of many much-hyped technologies, from solar and wind...
Curated Video
Production line opens making nanotech batteries
CZECH BATTERYSOURCE: AP TECHNOLOGY RESTRICTIONS: TECHNOLOGY CLIENTS ONLYLENGTH: 4:01SHOTLIST:AP Television Prague, Czech Republic - 14 December 20161. Jan Prochazka, President of HE3DA, and a technician put a 1 kilowatt hour battery in a...
Curated Video
Tighter controls needed for nanotechnology, says UN report
1. Various of entrance to the United Nations (UN) headquarters in Gigiri, Nairobi, diplomatic cars arriving
2. Medium of Kenyan Vice President Moody Awori arriving for environment conference
3. Medium of Awori signing visitors' book
4....
Curated Video
Companies show off nano-products at annual exhibition
Iran's expertise in nanotechnology is on show at this expo in Tehran.
The expo is an opportunity for Iranian companies to showcase their latest products, and to woo potential investors.
This blowtorch is perhaps not too hot to handle -...
Curated Video
The mystery behind Canada's "spy coins" is solved. The Defense Security Service -- an arm of the Pentagon -- caused an international stir earlier this year with a government-wide warning to watch out for Canadian coins containing hidden radio-frequency transmitters.
CAPTION: The surprise explanation behind the U.S. government's sensational but false warnings about mysterious Canadian spy coins is the harmless "poppy quarter," the world's first colorized coin, The Associated Press has learned.
Veritasium
How To Make Colour with Holes
Nature inspiring technology isn't new, but butterflies inspiring new nanotechnology excites everyone. As part of a larger playlist, an engaging video explains how we see color and the relationship with both magnetic and electric fields....
Veritasium
Welding in Space
After the first American space walk, the hatch would not close on the spacecraft. Engineers later identified the problem as cold welding. An out-of-this-world video shows scholars how this discovery led to many changes in space crafts as...
PBS
Hot Shots and Hot Jobs: Biomechanical Engineering of a Nano-Tattoo
The job of the biomechanical engineer is to figure out how physical forces influence living organisms. The narrator describes the education needed, while a fascinating video shows how engineers develop tattoos that can control remote...
Crash Course
Computer Engineering and the End of Moore's Law: Crash Course Engineering #35
Engineers make better computers, and computers make better engineers. An informative video describes the components of computers, including both hardware and software, and how engineers have a hand in improving these components. It...
American Chemical Society
Chameleons Are Masters of Nanotechnology
The oddball reptiles, chameleons, can teach animal lovers a little something about nanotechnology. Viewers peel away the layers of the chameleon skin to discover the different types of chromatophores using an episode of a larger series...
Crash Course
The Mighty Power of Nanomaterials: Crash Course Engineering #23
Did you know that gold at the nanoscale level actually appears purple? An informative video looks at nanomaterials in engineering. Viewers learn about the properties of nanomaterials and their importance in medicine, manufacturing,...
Crash Course
Cathedrals and Universities: Crash Course History of Science #11
How are so many medieval buildings still standing today? And, how did ancient builders learn such skills? Discover the amazing feats of medieval engineers with part 11 in a 15-installment History of Science series. The narrator describes...
American Chemical Society
The World's Smallest Robots: Rise of the Nanomachines
Think robots are big, clunky heaps of metal? Not anymore! Introduce your class to a whole new breed of robots through a video from the American Chemical Society's Reactions playlist. The resource shows what these tiny machines are made...
American Chemical Society
How to Make Electronic Skin with Stanford's Zhenan Bao
How many scientists does it take to make electronic skin? No, it's not a riddle! See a breakthrough in nanotechnology, courtesy of a video from the American Chemical Society's Reactions series. You'll hear the project leader, plus...
American Chemical Society
How Does Fluorescence Work?
Here's a video that will light up your day! Young scientists learn about fluorescence by watching an engaging video in the ACS Reactions series. They also study the uses of fluorescence in microbiology, quantum dots, and forensic science.
Veritasium
How To Make Graphene
The thinnest material known to man also conducts electricity and heat. The video discusses graphene, highlighting its strength and usefulness, explains nanotechnology, and details the Nobel Prize for playing with tape.