Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

Asteroseismology: How to Explore Stars with Sound

12th - Higher Ed
Asteroseismology allows scientists to explore stars with sound. It can help them figure out what a star is burning and even help pin down the age of stars!
Instructional Video10:38
PBS

We Are Star Stuff

12th - Higher Ed
Stars are our stellar alchemists. They spend their entire lifespan creating and molding elements. In their final moments, a supernova spreads these elements out into the universe, providing the building blocks for new stars, planets, and...
Instructional Video10:54
PBS

5 REAL Possibilities for Interstellar Travel

12th - Higher Ed
The prospect of interstellar travel is no longer sci-fi. It COULD be achievable within our lifetime! But, how would an interstellar rocket-ship work? On this week's episode of Space Time, Matt talks options for interstellar travel - from...
Instructional Video10:02
PBS

Why Quasars are so Awesome

12th - Higher Ed
When Quasars were first discovered the amount of light pouring out of such a tiny dot in space seemed impossible. A hysterical flurry of hypothesizing followed: swarms of neutron stars, alien civilizations harnessing their entire...
Instructional Video5:05
Bozeman Science

PS4C - Information Technologies and Instrumentation

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how humans use information technology and instrumentation to better understand their surrounds. Technologies (including X-rays, computers, and phones) use electromagnetic waves to improve the lives of...
Instructional Video6:07
SciShow

Starquakes Could Be Behind 3 Cosmic Mysteries

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve detected seismic activity all around the solar system, from earthquakes to moonquakes, marsquakes to venusquakes. But the most dramatic quakes we know of actually happen on stars!
Instructional Video4:01
MinutePhysics

Picture of the Big Bang (a.k.a. Oldest Light in the Universe)

12th - Higher Ed
Where does all the stuff in the universe come from?
Instructional Video5:38
SciShow

There's another Milky way out there

12th - Higher Ed
As a species, we like to think everything about us is one of a kind, including the Milky Way Galaxy, but new evidence shows that yet again, we're not so unique.
Instructional Video3:27
SciShow

The Biggest Water Reservoir in Space

12th - Higher Ed
In the late 2000s, scientists looking deep into space discovered the largest known water reservoir in the universe inside a quasar, orbiting a supermassive black hole. Learn more about quasars and what this water can tell us about the...
Instructional Video7:42
PBS

Kronos: Devourer Of Worlds

12th - Higher Ed
What happens when a star eats its planets? Find out on today's Space Time Journal Club.
Instructional Video3:40
SciShow

Astrobiology & the Search for Alien Life

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks about astrobiology - the study of and search for life in the universe off Earth. Right now, the field has more questions than answers, but all they all seek to answer that one fundamental query: are we alone in the universe?
Instructional Video5:50
SciShow

The Chemist Decoding Our Cosmic Origins | Great Minds: Ewine van Dishoeck

12th - Higher Ed
The apparent void in the darkness of space is not as empty as you might think. In fact, it somehow holds the key to creating stars, planets, and even us! And Dutch super-scientist Ewine van Dishoeck made it her life's work to figure out...
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

Why We Want to Find Plate Tectonics in Space

12th - Higher Ed
It’s not easy to find active plate tectonics on other worlds, but doing so may bring us one step closer to finding a planet that can support life.
Instructional Video10:48
PBS

Why is the Earth Round and the Milky Way Flat?

12th - Higher Ed
Our universe is not a very diverse place when it comes to shapes. Large celestial bodies become spheres, galaxies become discs, and there is little room for variation. Why is this? Well it turns out physics has some pretty strict rules...
Instructional Video4:01
SciShow

Record-Breaking Space Discoveries of 2016!

12th - Higher Ed
2016 was a lot of things, but for astronomers, it meant the discovery of some of the farthest, faintest, and youngest objects in the universe we've seen yet.
Instructional Video4:26
Be Smart

The Odds of Finding Life and Love

12th - Higher Ed
Love is a complicated combination of brain chemicals and behavior that scientists are only just beginning to figure out. And it's remarkable that in every society that we have looked at on Earth, romantic love exists. So if love is so...
Instructional Video9:03
PBS

Scientists Have Detected the First Stars

12th - Higher Ed
What do the first stars in the universe, dark matter, and superior siege engines have in common?
Instructional Video4:36
SciShow

3 Stars That Shouldn't Exist

12th - Higher Ed
Based on what we think we know about the universe these stars really shouldn't exist, but they do!
Instructional Video4:52
SciShow

A Better Way to Study Earth, and Lessons from Jellyfish Galaxies

12th - Higher Ed
A new detector can use neutrinos to help us take a peek inside Earth, and a study of jellyfish galaxies can help us understand more about an unsolved problem in astronomy.
Instructional Video3:46
MinutePhysics

What is the Purpose of Life? (Big Picture Ep. 5/5)

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how life arose and what its main function or purpose in the universe seems to be. Thanks to Sean Carroll for collaborating on it! This video is about how life arose and what its main function or purpose in the...
Instructional Video6:22
SciShow

3 Weird Stars You Can See with the Naked Eye

12th - Higher Ed
These three stars can easily be seen with the naked eye, but it took some fancy telescopes for us to realize how weird they really are!
Instructional Video7:43
PBS

Does Dark Matter BREAK Physics?

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode, welcome in Matt O'Dowd as the new host to rigorously take you through the mysteries of space, time, and the nature of reality. We're starting off this new season with perhaps one of the most mysterious things of all -...
Instructional Video31:47
SciShow

Black Holes: The Hungriest Things in the Universe | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
If you thought a hot dog eating contest was impressive to complete, imagine if a black hole entered it! They eat up everything around them, including stars! But they’re not just gluttonous blobs of the universe. Like all things in space,...
Instructional Video4:39
SciShow

3 Things We Still Don’t Understand About the Milky Way

12th - Higher Ed
We have been studying our home galaxy for years, but even though astronomy has come a long way, there is still a lot we don't know about the Milky Way.