Instructional Video3:12
SciShow

How Some People Echolocate Like Bats

12th - Higher Ed
Animals like bats and dolphins navigate the world using echolocation, but there’s also another animal capable of such a feat: humans.
Instructional Video18:16
TED Talks

Marcus du Sautoy: Symmetry, reality's riddle

12th - Higher Ed
The world turns on symmetry -- from the spin of subatomic particles to the dizzying beauty of an arabesque. But there's more to it than meets the eye. Here, Oxford mathematician Marcus du Sautoy offers a glimpse of the invisible numbers...
Instructional Video10:55
Crash Course

Brown Dwarfs

12th - Higher Ed
While Jupiter is nowhere near massive enough to initiate fusion in its core, there are even more massive objects out there that fall just short of that achievement as well called brown dwarfs. Brown dwarfs, have a mass that places them...
Instructional Video4:49
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The mathematics of sidewalk illusions - Fumiko Futamura

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you ever come across an oddly stretched image on the sidewalk, only to find that it looks remarkably realistic if you stand in exactly the right spot? These sidewalk illusions employ a technique called anamorphosis - a special case...
Instructional Video8:27
Bozeman Science

Center of Mass

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the center of mass of an object represents the average position of matter in an object. The center of mass of a system is a combination of all the objects within the system. As long as no external...
Instructional Video3:45
Curated Video

Compare Lengths of Objects by Drawing Pictures

K - 5th
In this video lesson, we present various examples, such as measuring train lengths and finding missing tiles, to help us compare lengths of objects by drawing pictures. The lesson emphasizes the importance of subtraction and highlights...
Instructional Video3:05
SciShow

What Makes Soft Things Soft

12th - Higher Ed
You're minding your own business, looking at blankets, when suddenly you feel something heavenly. Now you are petting an inanimate object and thinking about naming it and bringing it home. Why do some fabrics feel so soft?!
Instructional Video4:49
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The neuroscience of imagination - Andrey Vyshedskiy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Imagine, for a second, a duck teaching a French class. A ping-pong match in orbit around a black hole. A dolphin balancing a pineapple. You probably haven't actually seen any of these things. But you could imagine them instantly. How...
Instructional Video3:18
SciShow

Is There Gravity in Space

12th - Higher Ed
In a word, "yes" - space is packed with gravity. Hank explains how Isaac Newton described how gravity works, and why even though it seems that things are floating in space, they're still effected by gravity. Every object in the universe...
Instructional Video3:54
Crash Course Kids

Over (to) The Moon

3rd - 8th
Sabrina gets a new set in this episode of Crash Course Kids. Do you want to be an astronaut? Would you like to someday walk on the moon? Well, you better learn a little about gravity so you can escape from Earth and head into space....
Instructional Video2:36
MinutePhysics

Why Do Mirrors Flip Left & Right (but not up & down)?

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about why words flip left & right (aka horizontally) in a mirror but not up & down (aka vertically). The answer has to do with specular reflection, mirrors being like windows into another world (alternate universes, just...
Instructional Video10:50
Crash Course

The Milky Way

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re talking about our galactic neighborhood: The Milky Way. It’s a disk galaxy, a collection of dust, gas, and hundreds of billions of stars, with the Sun located about halfway out from the center. The disk has grand spiral...
Instructional Video5:29
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Light seconds, light years, light centuries: How to measure extreme distances - Yuan-Sen Ting

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When we look at the sky, we have a flat, two-dimensional view. So how do astronomers figure the distances of stars and galaxies from Earth? Yuan-Sen Ting shows us how trigonometric parallaxes, standard candles and more help us determine...
Instructional Video3:33
Bozeman Science

Wave-Particle Duality of Light

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how light can be treated as both a particle and a wave. Physicists use scale to determine which model to use when studying light. When the wavelength of light is equivalent to the size of the object a...
Instructional Video3:42
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How many ways can you arrange a deck of cards? - Yannay Khaikin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
One deck. Fifty-two cards. How many arrangements? Let's put it this way: Any time you pick up a well shuffled deck, you are almost certainly holding an arrangement of cards that has never before existed and might not exist again. Yannay...
Instructional Video3:22
SciShow

The Oort Cloud Believe it or Not

12th - Higher Ed
Learn about the Oort Cloud with host Reid Reimers on this episode of SciShow Space!
Instructional Video3:09
SciShow

The Asteroid Belt: Not What You Think!

12th - Higher Ed
Buckle up for a trip to the asteroid belt -- though it's not nearly as dangerous out there as you might think. But there's a LOT waiting to be discovered, including some crucial clues about the formation of the solar system itself.
Instructional Video6:10
Bozeman Science

Elastic and Inelastic Collisions

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen compares and contrasts elastic and inelastic collisions. In all collisions the linear momentum will be conserved. In an elastic collision the kinetic energy of the objects will also be maintained. Several...
Instructional Video4:24
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do glasses help us see? - Andrew Bastawrous and Clare Gilbert

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Today, glasses help millions of people with poor vision be able to see clearly. But how? Andrew Bastawrous and Clare Gilbert help unravel the answer by explaining refraction - the ability of a transparent medium, like glass, water, or...
Instructional Video6:03
Bozeman Science

Density

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how density measures the compactness of a material. You can calculate the density of a material by measuring the mass and dividing this by the volume. Water displacement is an effective way to measure...
Instructional Video4:20
Bozeman Science

Fundamental Particles

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how at the smallest level all matter is made of fundamental particles; including quarks, electron, photons and neutrinos. He explains how understanding the properties of these particles allows us to...
Instructional Video10:03
TED Talks

TED: Is life really that complex? | Hannah Fry

12th - Higher Ed
Can an algorithm forecast the site of the next riot? In this accessible talk, mathematician Hannah Fry shows how complex social behavior can be analyzed and perhaps predicted through analogies to natural phenomena, like the patterns of a...
Instructional Video14:18
TED Talks

Sarah-Jayne Blakemore: The mysterious workings of the adolescent brain

12th - Higher Ed
Why do teenagers seem so much more impulsive, so much less self-aware than grown-ups? Cognitive neuroscientist Sarah-Jayne Blakemore compares the prefrontal cortex in adolescents to that of adults, to show us how typically "teenage"...
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

3 Physics Experiments that Changed the World

12th - Higher Ed
Physics investigates why the universe behaves the way that it does, and today, Hank tells us about the three physics experiments that he thinks were the most awesome at helping us understand how the universe works.