Instructional Video14:22
SciShow

No, Space Doesn’t Kill You Like That

12th - Higher Ed
Hollywood (and other fictional media) loves to show people dying in outer space. And it has several go-to causes of death, on a sliding scale of accuracy. But it turns out, reality has some ways to kill you that are far stranger than...
Instructional Video6:13
SciShow

A Sugar-Coated Asteroid May Have Made All Life Possible

12th - Higher Ed
Arrokoth, an asteroid in the Kuiper Belt, is the most distant object ever explored by the New Horizons spacecraft. And it's covered in sugar. Here's why that might be important for understanding the nature of life itself. Hosted by:...
Instructional Video12:54
SciShow

5 Regrettable Things People Did With Uranium

12th - Higher Ed
Humans have known that uranium can cause health problems since at least the 1820s. But that hasn't stopped us from making stuff with uranium in it over the past two centuries. Like teeth, toys, and diabetes treatments! Hosted by:...
Instructional Video0:57
MinutePhysics

Tour of the Map of the Big Bang

12th - Higher Ed
Ever wanted to explore the Cosmic Background Radiation? It's our best picture of the big bang, and now you can!
Instructional Video2:43
MinuteEarth

How Do Greenhouse Gases Actually Work?

12th - Higher Ed
How Do Greenhouse Gases Actually Work?
Instructional Video13:16
SciShow

Why Does Everything Decay Into Lead

12th - Higher Ed
If you look at a copy of the periodic table, you might notice that basically every element after lead is labelled as radioactive. And the vast majority of those elements wind up decaying into some version of lead eventually. But why is...
Instructional Video15:02
SciShow

The Last Living Thing Won't Be a Cockroach

12th - Higher Ed
There are several ways the world could end, and scientists have given a lot of thought to what the last living thing will be.
Instructional Video11:38
SciShow

Cosmic Tails (That Aren’t From Comets)

12th - Higher Ed
Comets are famous for having space tails. But they're not the only ones! Asteroids, planets, and even stars can rock tails of their own.
Instructional Video11:59
SciShow

The Alien Storm That Ate Itself

12th - Higher Ed
From cyclones to snowstorms, Earth is home to some spectacular weather events. But they're nothing compared to what you can find on the other planets in our solar system. Magnetic tornadoes? Ammonia mushballs? Let's (not literally) dive...
Instructional Video8:27
SciShow

Chernobyl's Radioactive Wild Boar Paradox

12th - Higher Ed
After the Chernobyl Disaster, researchers have been studying the movement of radioactive contamination all over central Europe. Fortunately, that radioactive contamination is decreasing in just about every living thing, except for one...
Instructional Video3:16
MinuteEarth

Apparently tree FINGERPRINTS are a thing

12th - Higher Ed
Every species on Earth has a fingerprint - whether or not they have fingers at all.
Instructional Video14:20
SciShow

Holes In Space That Aren't Black | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve talked a lot about black holes, but there are other kinds of space holes out there that deserve some time in the spotlight!
Instructional Video14:56
SciShow

A Big Bang Beginner’s Guide | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
While there's still a lot that astrophysicists don't know about the Big Bang, there are some things we do know. So today, let's get caught up on the Big Bang basics.
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

Great Minds: Conny Aerts, the Starquake Professor

12th - Higher Ed
While doing some light reading of data from a telescope, Conny Aerts made a breakthrough that allowed her to lead the charge in the field of asteroseismology and win her the 2022 Kavli Prize in Astrophysics.
Instructional Video3:21
SciShow

Astronauts Need a Better Sunscreen

12th - Higher Ed
Space is a dangerous place. One of the many dangers comes in the form of radiation. On Earth, sunscreen helps shield our bodies. But astronauts on the ISS, or eventually on the Moon/Mars/etc., will have to be rocking some suped-up sunblock.
Instructional Video14:31
PBS

Is Interstellar Travel Impossible?

12th - Higher Ed
Space is pretty deadly. But is it so deadly that we’re effectively imprisoned in our solar system forever? Many have said so, but a few have actually figured it out.
Instructional Video14:35
PBS

What Happens After the Universe Ends?

12th - Higher Ed
Conformal Cyclic Cosmology is a story of the origin and the end of our universe from great mathematical physicist Sir Roger Penrose. It’s goes like this: the infinitely far future, when the universe has expanded exponentially to to an...
Instructional Video13:12
PBS

Building Black Holes in a Lab

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are about the worst subjects for direct study in the universe. But at this stage, it’s all we can do to convince ourselves of their existence. Actually studying the physics of real black holes is much, much harder. I mean, we...
Instructional Video11:34
PBS

What If (Tiny) Black Holes Are Everywhere?

12th - Higher Ed
It’s fair to say that black holes may be the scariest objects in the universe. Happily for us, the nearest is probably many light-years away. Unless of course, Planck relics are a thing - in which case they might be literally everywhere.
Instructional Video13:58
PBS

Can Viruses Travel Between Planets?

12th - Higher Ed
With the global pandemic of Covid 19 still encompassing the world, we are generally not big fans of viruses right now. But we sure are thinking about them a lot. That’s right, even astrophysicists are pondering these bizarre little...
Instructional Video13:27
PBS

Can We Survive the Destruction of the Earth? ft. Neal Stephenson

12th - Higher Ed
What do we do to protect ourselves from extinction level events? And what if some of those events are unavoidable? Can we survive adrift in space? Find out in this episode of Space Time.
Instructional Video6:46
SciShow

Why Aliens Might Love Their Frozen Home

12th - Higher Ed
In the hunt for life beyond Earth, scientists shouldn't skip over frozen planets. In some cases, ice might actually help life evolve!
Instructional Video6:23
SciShow

Launching Rockets Mid-Air

12th - Higher Ed
If you picture a rocket launch, do you imagine it taking off from a hot air balloon? In this episode, we'll learn how using balloons to launch sounding rockets advanced our understanding of planet Earth, radiation, and how to keep...
Instructional Video6:52
SciShow

How PET Scans See Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
When someone gets a PET scan to detect tumors and how far a cancer has spread, that machine is actually detecting sugar. Because cancer has a sweet tooth, and this phenomenon, called the Warburg effect, may help us develop new cancer...