Instructional Video7:00
TED Talks

Alexa Meade: Your body is my canvas

12th - Higher Ed
Alexa Meade takes an innovative approach to art. Not for her a life of sketching and stretching canvases. Instead, she selects a topic and then paints it--literally. She covers everything in a scene--people, chairs, food, you name it--in...
Instructional Video6:03
SciShow

Could Life Have Survived in Mars's Ancient Lake?

12th - Higher Ed
Samples from the Curiosity rover suggest that Mars had a potentially habitable lake in its past, and gravitational lensing has helped scientists weigh a star!
Instructional Video14:26
TED Talks

TED: Want to be happy? Be grateful | David Steindl-Rast

12th - Higher Ed
The one thing all humans have in common is that each of us wants to be happy, says Brother David Steindl-Rast, a monk and interfaith scholar. And happiness, he suggests, is born from gratitude. An inspiring lesson in slowing down,...
Instructional Video5:52
SciShow

A Telescope Bigger Than the Solar System

12th - Higher Ed
It turns out if you’d like to take a deeper look into the universe, the universe itself might actually help you do that!
Instructional Video6:09
Bozeman Science

Wave-Particle Duality - Part 1

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the wave-particle duality discovered by scientists. In certain situations particles (like electrons and photons) display wave like properties. This phenomenon can best be explored using the double...
Instructional Video5:07
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Chris A. Kniesly: History through the eyes of a chicken

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The Ancient Egyptian king Thutmose III described the chicken as a marvelous foreign bird that "gives birth daily." Romans brought them on their military campaigns to foretell the success of future battles. Today, this bird occupies a...
Instructional Video11:15
SciShow

SciShow Quiz Show: Reid Reimers

12th - Higher Ed
Michael Aranda hosts SciShow's new Quiz Show! Hank and Reid have a battle of wits to win prizes for two lucky Subbable Subscribers! Chapters View all MICHAEL ARANDA 0:17 REID REIMERS 0:28 KEITH CHEIM 1:34 SPERM WHALE 4:26 COLLOID 5:30 A...
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

How to Write Directly on the Brain

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have found a way to hack the visual process and generate shapes directly on the brain, so a person can see them without using their eyes.
Instructional Video5:45
SciShow

3 Ways We Know What the Ancient Solar System Was Like

12th - Higher Ed
The New Horizons spacecraft has given us lots of clues about the early days of our solar system, but we don't always have to travel billions of kilometers to peer into our past.
Instructional Video3:01
SciShow

Why Is the Ocean Blue?

12th - Higher Ed
You may have satisfied your inner five-year-old by learning why the sky is blue, but where does the ocean's color come from?
Instructional Video3:47
SciShow

Sonoluminescence: When Sound Creates Light

12th - Higher Ed
So, a mantis shrimp's claws are pretty strong... so strong that they can produce a bubble that's about as hot as the sun and collapses with a flash of light when they snap... and scientists aren't quite sure how they do it!
Instructional Video4:17
MinutePhysics

How Big is the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
It has NO EDGE. And NO CENTER... or does it?
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

We Just Took the First Image of a Baby Planet!

12th - Higher Ed
SPHERE took a photo of a baby planet and the origin of the asteroid belt may be less mysterious than we thought.
Instructional Video16:09
TED Talks

George Whitesides: A lab the size of a postage stamp

12th - Higher Ed
Traditional lab tests for disease diagnosis can be too expensive and cumbersome for the regions most in need. George Whitesides' ingenious answer is a foolproof tool that can be manufactured at virtually zero cost.
Instructional Video6:34
TED Talks

Jeremy Kasdin: The flower-shaped starshade that might help us detect Earth-like planets

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers believe that every star in the galaxy has a planet, one fifth of which might harbor life. Only we haven't seen any of them -- yet. Jeremy Kasdin and his team are looking to change that with the design and engineering of an...
Instructional Video13:46
TED Talks

TED: The most mysterious star in the universe | Tabetha Boyajian

12th - Higher Ed
Something massive, with roughly 1,000 times the area of earth, is blocking the light coming from a distant star known as KIC 8462852, and nobody is quite sure what it is. As astronomer Tabetha Boyajian investigated this perplexing...
Instructional Video4:19
SciShow

The Arizona Fireball and Planet Nine's Origins

12th - Higher Ed
An asteroid streaked across Arizona's night sky, and we have a new theory on where the hypothetical Planet Nine came from.
Instructional Video13:10
TED Talks

Paul McEuen and Marc Miskin: Tiny robots with giant potential

12th - Higher Ed
Take a trip down the microworld as roboticists Paul McEuen and Marc Miskin explain how they design and mass-produce microrobots the size of a single cell, powered by atomically thin legs -- and show how these machines could one day be...
Instructional Video2:43
SciShow

Do Glasses Ruin Your Eyesight?

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings the answer into focus.
Instructional Video2:40
SciShow

Can You Get a Sunburn Behind a Window?

12th - Higher Ed
If you’re not lounging on the beach on a hot summer day, why would you think to put on sunscreen? Well, you might need sunscreen more often than you think.
Instructional Video1:54
SciShow

Can Bright Light Make You Sneeze?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow's Quick Questions explains why bright light can make some people sneeze! Really!
Instructional Video2:49
SciShow

Blazars Are A Thing

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains how quasars and blazars are both the same thing - just oriented differently in respect to us - and how that impacts the way we perceive them and how it also effects the ways we can study them.
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

What’s Up With the Weird Pockmarks Up and Down the East Coast?

12th - Higher Ed
All along the east coast of the United States there are thousands of oval shaped pock marks, and scientists think they have a clue as to how they got there.
Instructional Video14:13
TED Talks

Juna Kollmeier: The most detailed map of galaxies, black holes and stars ever made

12th - Higher Ed
Humans have been studying the stars for thousands of years, but astrophysicist Juna Kollmeier is on a special mission: creating the most detailed 3-D maps of the universe ever made. Journey across the cosmos as she shares her team's work...