Instructional Video8:07
Science ABC

What is Radioactivity and Is It Always Harmful: Explained in Really Simple Words

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Radioactivity is the property through which a heavier, unstable nucleus assumes a more stable state by emitting radiation. The process through which a nucleus turns into a stable one is called radioactive decay. But is radioactivity or...
Instructional Video8:23
Science ABC

What is Evolution: A REALLY SIMPLE and Brief Explanation

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Evolution is the net change in organisms or a population over the span of many generations. This change in organisms or populations happens through DNA mutations and reconbination and is passed down to the next generation through...
Instructional Video5:19
Science ABC

What is DNA and How Does it Work?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is a molecule that is often called the blueprint of life. Located in the nucleus, the DNA is a very long molecule with a helix winding structure like a twisted ladder. The rungs of the ladder are made of four...
Instructional Video4:53
Science ABC

What is Calculus in Math? Simple Explanation with Examples

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Calculus is a branch of mathematics that deals with very small changes. Calculus consists of two main segments—differential calculus and integral calculus. Differential calculus primarily deals with the rate of change of things, while...
Instructional Video4:03
Science ABC

What is Blackbody Radiation: Explained in Simple Terms

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A black body is a theoretical or imaginary object that perfectly absorbs all incoming electromagnetic radiation, and also emits radiation, like heat and visible light, based on its temperature. A black body is considered theoretical...
Instructional Video5:21
Science ABC

What If Something Travels Faster Than The Speed Of Light?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Can anything travel faster than the speed of light? Is it even possible for something to undertake the “speed of light” travel? And what if something can actually travel faster than light? What is Cherenkov radiation and how is it...
Instructional Video4:59
Science ABC

What Exactly is Spacetime? Explained in Ridiculously Simple Words

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Spacetime, as a concept, is related to a space that consists of 4 dimensions instead of the regular 3-dimensional space. As early as 1905, Einstein proposed a now widely popular theory that the speed of light is independent of the motion...
Instructional Video11:11
Science ABC

What Does It Take To Make Vaccines?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Since vaccination was discovered in 1769 by Edward Jenner, it has come to become an indispensable part of healthcare. Over the last 50 years, advances in science and technology have allowed us to develop vaccines to diseases at breakneck...
Instructional Video7:57
Science ABC

What Does Chronic Stress Do To Your Mind And Body

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Chronic Stress: The Silent Health Threat | Understanding Cortisol's Impact In this eye-opening video, we delve deep into the world of chronic stress and its hidden consequences on your health. Learn how cortisol, the stress hormone, can...
Instructional Video7:08
Science ABC

What Are The Different Atomic Models? Dalton, Rutherford, Bohr and Heisenberg Models Explained

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Atomic Models: Centuries ago, people didn’t know exactly what was inside an atom, but they had some “ideas”. Around 400 BC, a Greek philosopher named Democritus came up with a theory that everything in the world was made of tiny...
Instructional Video7:47
Science ABC

What are Mutations and what are the different types of Mutations?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A mutation is a random change in the DNA. Mutations can be neutral, which means it does not cause a change in a trait of the organism, or it could cause a beneficial or a harmful mutation. There are a few different types of mutations -...
Instructional Video9:13
Science ABC

What are GMOs (Genetically Modified Organisms)?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
GMO or genetically modified organisms are organisms with their DNA modified, usually by adding new or different DNA from another organism. GM crops are crops that have genes from bacteria. These genes allow the plants to either produce...
Instructional Video5:07
Science ABC

What Are Asteroids And Where Do They Come From?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Asteroids are small, rocky objects that orbit the sun, just like the rest of the planets and celestial bodies in our solar system. Although asteroids are present throughout the solar system, most of them live in the asteroid belt—a...
Instructional Video4:15
Science ABC

Tensor Tympani Muscle: Why Do You Hear A Rumbling Sound When You Close Your Eyes Too Hard?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The tensor tympani muscle is a tiny muscle in the middle ear that helps dampens external sounds falling on the ear. The tensor tympani muscle originates from the Eustachian tube, which is also known as the auditory tube. From there, this...
Instructional Video5:57
Science ABC

Slowing or Reversing Aging: Can We Live for 180 years?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Ageing is a complex process which results from progressive loss of the body’s ability to maintain itself. This ageing comes with diseases and a general decline in health. Over the past few decades, scientists have come to better...
Instructional Video6:20
Science ABC

Rocket Science: How Rockets Work - A Short and Basic Explanation

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How do rockets work? What is the science behind a rocket launch? How does a rocket go into space? In this short and simple video, we discuss the science of how rockets work. It is a short animated video for kids and laymen to understand...
Instructional Video7:18
Science ABC

Rigor Mortis, Livor Mortis, Pallor Mortis, Algor Mortis: Forensic Science Explains Stages of Death

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Once a person dies, their body begins a process of decay. This process can be seen through certain external changes which are called post mortem signs of death. There are 4 postmortem signs of death - pallor mortis, algor mortis, rigor...
Instructional Video6:50
Science ABC

Respiratory System: From Inspiration to Expiration Explained in Simple Words

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The respiratory system is composed of the nose or nasal cavity, the pharynx, the larynx, the trachea, the bronchi, and the lungs. The respiratory system's functions are gaseous exchange, inhaling oxygen and exhaling out carbon dioxide,...
Instructional Video5:10
Science ABC

Resonance (Chemistry) Explained in Simple Words with Examples

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Resonance is a way of describing delocalized electrons within certain molecules where a single Lewis formula cannot express the bonding. To understand resonance in chemistry, you need to first understand covalent bonds, sigma and pi...
Instructional Video7:51
Science ABC

Quantum Physics: Here’s Why Movies Always Get It Wrong

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Quantum physics deals with the foundation of our world – the electrons in an atom, the protons inside the nucleus, the quarks that build those protons, and the photons that we perceive as light. These constitute everything that we are...
Instructional Video7:10
Science ABC

Photosynthesis: The Biochemistry Behind How Plants Make Their Food

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Plants, unlike most living things, produce their own food through a process called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis means 'making using light'. Plants use the energy from the sunlight to make food. The food matter comes from carbon dioxide...
Instructional Video4:22
Science ABC

Photoelectric Effect Explained in Simple Words for Beginners

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Photoelectric effect occurs when electromagnetic radiation above the threshold frequency of the given metallic surface, strikes the surface and releases electrons from it. This happens because light is made of massless particles called...
Instructional Video5:57
Science ABC

Particle accelerators: What are they, how do they work and why are they important to us?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A particle accelerator is a machine that accelerates particles. More specifically, it accelerates elementary particles, like protons and electrons, at extremely high speeds—almost 99.99% of the speed of light. These particles are then...
Instructional Video4:15
Science ABC

Newton’s Second Law: Spiderman And The Death Of Gwen Stacy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Did you know that Gwen stacy's death and Newton’s second law of motion have a connection? In the comics “The Amazing Spiderman”, Gwen Stacy dies after she is pushed off a bridge. Spiderman jumps behind her to catch her in his webbing,...