Instructional Video3:39
Curated Video

Is There Sound in Space?

12th - Higher Ed
Sound can't actually travel through a vacuum like space, but scientists have learned that there's still plenty to hear.
Instructional Video16:23
TED Talks

TED: What's so sexy about math? | Cedric Villani

12th - Higher Ed
Hidden truths permeate our world; they're inaccessible to our senses, but math allows us to go beyond our intuition to uncover their mysteries. In this survey of mathematical breakthroughs, Fields Medal winner Cedric Villani speaks to...
Instructional Video9:42
SciShow

Why Do Neutrinos Have Mass? A Small Question with Huge Consequences

12th - Higher Ed
Neutrinos are weird. But all the big unsolved problems in physics are somehow connected to one unsolved mystery: Why do neutrinos have mass?
Instructional Video3:23
SciShow

Non-Newtonian Fluids & A Bulletproof Hoodie

12th - Higher Ed
Hank describes how non-Newtonian fluids can save lives - and dreams of a bulletproof hoodie.
Instructional Video10:20
PBS

Are You a Boltzmann Brain?

12th - Higher Ed
Was an incredible drop in entropy responsible for the Big Bang? If that's the case, this would lead us to conclude that a great many other things are possible, including the likelihood that you are a Boltzmann Brain.
Instructional Video10:44
SciShow

What If the Large Hadron Collider Made a Black Hole?

12th - Higher Ed
Making a black hole in a particle accelerator sounds… a bit dangerous, to say the least, but scientists think that it could be possible! Here's why it probably wouldn't be dangerous -- and might even teach us something.
Instructional Video2:43
SciShow

Why Do the Planets Orbit in the Same Plane?

12th - Higher Ed
While there is a little wiggle room, the planets in our solar system really are orbiting on mostly the same level. Why do they do that?
Instructional Video5:43
SciShow

What We’re Learning from the Brightest Supernova Ever Seen - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
It’s been a great week for space explosions! Astronomers learned more about the mechanism that causes novas by looking at the nova V906 Carinae, and the brightest supernova ever recorded shed some new light on pulsation pair-instability.
Instructional Video2:56
SciShow

Tractor Beams: Almost Real!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us about some developments that are being made in the dramatic area of laser tractor beams.
Instructional Video3:30
SciShow

The Science of Sunbeams

12th - Higher Ed
Sunbeams shooting down through the clouds make for some great photographs, but what's the science behind these beautiful rays of light?
Instructional Video11:45
Crash Course

The Electron: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us the story of the electron and describes how reality is a kind of music, discussing electron shells and orbitals, electron configurations, ionization and electron affinities, and how all these things can be understood via...
Instructional Video3:19
SciShow Kids

Where Do Snowflakes Come From?

K - 5th
Each snowflake is a six-pointed work of art, as cool and as individual as you are. But how does nature make snowflakes?
Instructional Video3:41
MinutePhysics

Impossible Muons

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how terrestrial muons are part of our experimental proof of time dilation, length contraction, and special relativity in general. REFERENCES Cosmic Rays https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_ray Terrestrial Cosmic Rays...
Instructional Video2:50
SciShow

Absolute Zero: Absolute Awesome

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains absolute zero: -273.15 degrees Celsius - and the coldest place in the known universe may surprise you.
Instructional Video3:44
SciShow

So, Negative Gravity Is a Thing

12th - Higher Ed
In nature, most of our basic forces both attract and repel. In fact, gravity is the only exception. But, according to theorists, sound waves actually have negative gravity.
Instructional Video4:19
SciShow Kids

Fun With Bubbles!

K - 5th
Blowing bubbles can be really fun, but they're also a great way to learn some science!
Instructional Video4:08
Crash Course Kids

Vacation or Conservation (Of Mass)

3rd - 8th
So when water evaporates, what happens? Where does that water go? Does just vanish? Is it no more? Can matter every just go away? Well, the answer is no, it can't. But it can LOOK like it does. In this episode of Crash Course Kids,...
Instructional Video3:41
SciShow

Is the Size of Neutron Stars A Lie, Or Only A FRIB?

12th - Higher Ed
Have we been wrong about how big neutron stars are this whole time?
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow

Solving the Mysteries of Saturn

12th - Higher Ed
This week on SciShow Space News, Cassini visited Saturn's moon Dione for the last time, and two little shepherd moons may have helped form some of Saturn's rings.
Instructional Video3:05
SciShow

Bacteria and Viruses Are Raining Down on Us All the Time

12th - Higher Ed
While you probably aren’t going to get sick from just being outside in all this microbe rain, pathogenic organisms ARE raining down on us all the time, everywhere!
Instructional Video9:36
TED Talks

TED: The next step in nanotechnology | George Tulevski

12th - Higher Ed
Nearly every other year the transistors that power silicon computer chip shrink in size by half and double in performance, enabling our devices to become more mobile and accessible. But what happens when these components can't get any...
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

How the First Stars Transformed the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
The first stars turned all the neutral hydrogen in the universe back into ions, created a bunch of new elements, and just generally made a mess. But without them, you wouldn’t be here.
Instructional Video4:44
Bozeman Science

Wave-Particle Duality - Part 2

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how classical waves (like light) can have particle properties. Albert Einsetein used the photoelectric effect to show how photons have particle properties.
Instructional Video8:37
Crash Course

Quantum Mechanics - Part 2: Crash Course Physics

12th - Higher Ed
e=mc2... it's a big deal, right? But why? And what about this grumpy cat in a box and probability? In this episode of Crash Course Physics, Shini attempts to explain a little more on the topic of Quantum Mechanics.