Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

Why Astronomy Hasn't Really Changed Since the 1900s

12th - Higher Ed
The way modern researchers study the sky hasn’t really changed in the last few centuries. For the most part, astronomers still study things by analyzing their light.
Instructional Video3:09
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The mystery of motion sickness - Rose Eveleth

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Although one third of the population suffers from motion sickness, scientists aren't exactly sure what causes it. Like the common cold, it's a seemingly simple problem that's still without a cure. And if you think it's bad on a long...
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow

Why We're Building Underground Telescopes

12th - Higher Ed
Obviously most telescopes need to see the sky to do their job, but when you are studying a wave that can pass right through the earth, the best place for your telescope might be underground.
Instructional Video12:08
3Blue1Brown

Inverse matrices, column space and null space: Essence of Linear Algebra - Part 7 of 15

12th - Higher Ed
How do you think about the column space and null space of a matrix visually? How do you think about the inverse of a matrix?
Instructional Video10:16
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Scale: Level 4 - Scale Models

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on thinking in scale. TERMS Phenomena - observable events in the natural world (require explanations) Time - an irreversible series of events Space - the dimensions...
Instructional Video9:52
3Blue1Brown

Vectors, what even are they? | Essence of linear algebra, chapter 1

12th - Higher Ed
What is a vector? Is it an arrow in space? A list of numbers?
Instructional Video4:41
SciShow Kids

Create Your Own Asteroid Impact!

K - 5th
A meteor shower happens when rocks from space burn up in the atmosphere and make a beautiful light show! Lately, though, Squeaks has been wondering what would happen if one of those space rocks made it through the atmosphere to the...
Instructional Video1:49
MinutePhysics

Why It's HARD To Land on Mars

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about why it's harder to successfully land spacecraft and landers and rovers on Mars than on Earth, or Venus, or the Moon, or Titan, or asteroids. It all comes down to atmospheric density! When there's no atmosphere, you...
Instructional Video5:57
SciShow

How Earth’s Tides Gave Us Life As We Know It

12th - Higher Ed
While astronomers are busy searching for life beyond Earth, they’ve also started asking another question: If life seems so difficult to find, then why is our world so full of it? One answer might be overhead right now: the Moon!
Instructional Video4:40
SciShow

What If the Universe Isn't Uniform?

12th - Higher Ed
According to the cosmological principle, the universe is more or less the same in all directions. But what happens when we put this to the test?
Instructional Video4:56
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Fabio Pacucci: Can a black hole be destroyed?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Black holes are among the most destructive objects in the universe. Anything that gets too close to a black hole, be it an asteroid, planet, or star, risks being torn apart by its extreme gravitational field. By some accounts, the...
Instructional Video12:28
PBS

Dark Flow

12th - Higher Ed
Why does the universe seem to be moving in one particular direction?
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

Fire, Lightning, and Crystals in Space: 20 Years on the ISS

12th - Higher Ed
2020 marks two decades of people living and working about the ISS, and from fireballs to microgravity grown crystals, they've been keeping busy.
Instructional Video2:47
SciShow

Where Are All the Electric Airplanes

12th - Higher Ed
Clean, renewable energy is becoming more and more common in our everyday lives. But, as our cars and buildings become more green, tens of thousands of airplanes fly every day using petroleum-based fuel, and there's seemingly no end in...
Instructional Video5:04
MinutePhysics

How ISPs Violate the Laws of Mathematics

12th - Higher Ed
This joke video is about how Internet Service Providers (aka ISPs, internet companies, telecommunications companies, etc) violate the basic axioms of Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory. Like the axiom of choice (sometimes Well-ordering...
Instructional Video12:10
SciShow

7 Mysteries Science Hasn't Solved

12th - Higher Ed
Even science can't yet explain these 7 extremely cool, weird phenomena in the universe, despite decades or even centuries of research. Chapters BALL LIGHTNING 1:09 3:07 SONIC BOOM SKYQUAKES 3:13 FAST RADIO BURSTS 4:21 Actinomycetes 6:42...
Instructional Video9:33
TED Talks

6 essential lessons for women leaders | Julia Gillard and Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala

12th - Higher Ed
In a rich conversation full of practical insights, former Prime Minister of Australia Julia Gillard and former Finance Minister of Nigeria Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala reflect on their experiences as women leaders in positions of global power --...
Instructional Video2:53
MinutePhysics

Why Doesn't Time Flow Backwards? (Big Picture Ep. 1/5)

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to Google Making and Science for supporting this series, and to Sean Carroll for collaborating on it! AMAZING Interactive Entropy explainer by Aatish Bhatia: http://aatishb.github.io/entropy/ This video is about why entropy gives...
Instructional Video5:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is the universe expanding into? - Sajan Saini

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The universe began in a Big Bang nearly fourteen billion years ago, and has been expanding ever since. But how does the universe expand and what is it expanding into? Sajan Saini explains the existing theories around the Big Bang and...
Instructional Video4:21
MinutePhysics

The Portal Paradox

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the Portal Paradox - a paradox in the video game Portal (and Portal 2) regarding whether or not a companion cube passing through a moving portal plops out of the other end with no speed (velocity, momentum), or shoots...
Instructional Video12:26
TED Talks

Jamie Paik: Origami robots that reshape and transform themselves

12th - Higher Ed
Taking design cues from origami, robotician Jamie Paik and her team created "robogamis": folding robots made out super-thin materials that can reshape and transform themselves. In this talk and tech demo, Paik shows how robogamis could...
Instructional Video19:59
3Blue1Brown

Divergence and curl: The language of Maxwell's equations, fluid flow, and more

12th - Higher Ed
Divergence, curl, and their relation to fluid flow and electromagnetism
Instructional Video9:28
PBS

How Much Information is in the Universe?

12th - Higher Ed
Billions of galaxies, each with billions of stars, each with .... rather a lot of particles in them. And then there's dark matter, black holes, planets, and the particles and radiation in between the stars and galaxies. But.... is the...
Instructional Video12:14
TED Talks

TED: Your words may predict your future mental health | Mariano Sigman

12th - Higher Ed
Can the way you speak and write today predict your future mental state, even the onset of psychosis? In this fascinating talk, neuroscientist Mariano Sigman reflects on ancient Greece and the origins of introspection to investigate how...