Instructional Video15:37
TED Talks

TED: Life-altering questions about the end of the universe | Katie Mack

12th - Higher Ed
In this fascinating conversation, cosmologist and TED Fellow Katie Mack delves into everything from the Big Bang theory to what we see at the edge of the observable universe to a few ways the cosmos might end. Stay tuned to hear Mack...
Instructional Video11:30
Crash Course

The Oort Cloud

12th - Higher Ed
Now that we’re done with the planets, asteroid belt, and comets, we’re heading to the outskirts of the solar system. Out past Neptune are vast reservoirs of icy bodies that can become comets if they get poked into the inner solar system....
Instructional Video5:58
SciShow

This Image Might Show Exomoons Forming! SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have conclusively imaged a circumplanetary disk around a distant exoplanet, and Jupiter's auroras claim the spotlight with their unique Birkeland currents.
Instructional Video4:53
SciShow

Our Galaxy Could Be Full of Exoplanets with Oceans | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Earlier this spring NASA announced a new research model that predicts that ocean worlds are far from rare, and our galaxy might be full of them. And a new study examines evidence that Pluto may have had an underground ocean all along!
Instructional Video21:44
TED Talks

Brian Greene: Is our universe the only universe?

12th - Higher Ed
Is there more than one universe? In this visually rich, action-packed talk, Brian Greene shows how the unanswered questions of physics (starting with a big one: What caused the Big Bang?) have led to the theory that our own universe is...
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Is there a center of the universe? - Marjee Chmiel and Trevor Owens

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's been a long road to the discovery that Earth is not the center of the Solar System, the Milky Way, or the universe; great thinkers from Aristotle to Bruno have grappled with it for millennia. But if we aren't at the center of the...
Instructional Video4:42
Crash Course Kids

Gas Giants Weather

3rd - 8th
Last time, we learned that there is in fact weather on other planets. But those were the rocky planets, like Earth. What about the big Gas Giants? What's the weather like there? In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina takes us on a...
Instructional Video3:39
SciShow Kids

Explore Saturn's Rings

K - 5th
There's a lot more to Saturn's rings than just looking awesome! Find out why!
Instructional Video4:17
SciShow

We Found a Planet That Orbits Three Stars..Maybe?

12th - Higher Ed
New simulations of a triple-star system in the constellation Orion suggest that a planet might be orbiting three stars, which could drastically increase the amount of the solar systems we believe are out there forming planets! And the...
Instructional Video3:46
SciShow

The First Star-Within-A-Star

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space shares the latest news from around the universe, including the first observation of a star-within-a-star, and the debut image from the newest telescope to be enlisted in the hunt for alien worlds.
Instructional Video4:03
SciShow Kids

Are Aliens Real?

K - 5th
Have you ever wondered if aliens exist? You're not alone! Learn about what alien life needs to survive in the universe!
Instructional Video10:00
Crash Course

How Does the Earth Move Crash Course Geography

12th - Higher Ed
Today, we're going to talk about how the Earth moves, but to do that, we're going to have to go way back to the early days of the galaxy! Processes that happened before the Earth even formed have led us to the geographic patterns and...
Instructional Video4:15
SciShow

Why Venus Could Doom 'Habitable' Exoplanets

12th - Higher Ed
There are exoplanets out there that seem very Earth-like, but if you look out and see liquid metal instead of liquid water, you might be in the Venus zone.
Instructional Video11:44
TED Talks

TED: Civilization on the Moon -- and what it means for life on Earth | Jessy Kate Schingler

12th - Higher Ed
We could realistically see people starting to live and work on the Moon in the next decade -- and how we do it matters, says space policy researcher Jessy Kate Schingler. In this fascinating talk, she discusses the critical issues that...
Instructional Video6:18
PBS

Are We Alone? Galactic Civilization Challenge

12th - Higher Ed
The Drake Equation tells us the likelihood that there are other advanced technological civilizations waiting for us among the stars. In this episode of Space Time we challenge you to use the Drake Equation to help us determine how near...
Instructional Video6:01
SciShow

How the Movement of Other Planets Affects Earth — Yes, Really

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have found at least three cycles in nature that can be traced back to the alignment of the planets. And while they won’t tell you anything about your love life or personality, by studying them, we can learn about our planet’s...
Instructional Video3:45
SciShow

A New Dwarf Planet?

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomer Jean-Luc Margot has come up with a new definition for planets that may help us categorize worlds outside of the solar system, and we may have also discovered a new dwarf planet within the solar system!
Instructional Video12:43
PBS

Will We Ever Find Alien Life?

12th - Higher Ed
The silence of the galaxy and the resulting Fermi Paradox has perplexed us for nearly 50 years. But our most recent surveys of the Milky Way finally allow us to draw scientific conclusions about the depressingly persistent absence of...
Instructional Video13:15
TED Talks

Alexander MacDonald: How centuries of sci-fi sparked spaceflight

12th - Higher Ed
Long before we had rocket scientists, the idea of spaceflight traveled from mind to mind across generations. With great visuals, TED Fellow and NASA economist Alexander MacDonald shows how 300 years of sci-fi tales -- from Edgar Allan...
Instructional Video2:56
MinuteEarth

Our Best View Of Bacteria Is...From Space?!

12th - Higher Ed
Observing the effects of microbes using satellites can give us all sorts of useful information about life on Earth ... and other planets too.
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

This Planet Used to Be the Core of a Gas Giant? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists may have found the light from two merging black holes, and a gas giant, without the gas.
Instructional Video7:46
TED Talks

Jon Nguyen: Tour the solar system from home

12th - Higher Ed
Want to navigate the solar system without having to buy a spacecraft? Jon Nguyen demos NASA JPL's "Eyes on the Solar System" -- free-to-use software for exploring the planets, moons, asteroids, and spacecraft that rotate around our sun...
Instructional Video3:24
SciShow

Bright Spots on Ceres, and Volcanoes on Venus

12th - Higher Ed
Dawn is spiraling in for a closer look at Ceres, and researchers have discovered the best evidence yet for active volcanoes on Venus. Plus, check out Venus and Jupiter right next to each other in the sky!
Instructional Video5:37
SciShow

Some of Earth’s Water Was Created by the Sun? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
The source of earth's water is something of a mystery, and some scientists are starting to think that the sun might have provided the special ingredients to help.