Instructional Video5:10
MinutePhysics

Einstein's Biggest Blunder, Explained

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how Albert Einstein made a mistake when applying the Field Equations of General Relativity to cosmology (in particular, to a static, constant density universe), and solved the problem by introducing the cosmological...
Instructional Video4:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the dark matter fuel riddle? - Daniel Finkel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
An ancient, abandoned alien space station has been discovered. Can you beat everyone in the galaxy and reach it first? -- It’s an incredible discovery: an abandoned alien space station filled with precursor technology. Now every species...
Instructional Video14:12
SciShow

5 Sci-Fi Futures We Actually Have to Worry About

12th - Higher Ed
5 Sci-Fi Futures We Actually Have to Worry About
Instructional Video1:46
MinutePhysics

Ring AROUND the Earth?

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about what would happen if we built a giant ring around earth – what would happen to the ring, that is. Would if fall? Collapse? Start spinning? REFERENCES: Why Isn’t It Faster to Fly West? Video...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How computers translate human language - Ioannis Papachimonas

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Is a universal translator possible in real life? We already have many programs that claim to be able to take a word, sentence, or entire book in one language and translate it into almost any other. The reality, however, is a bit more...
Instructional Video19:06
TED Talks

TED: A futuristic vision of the age of holograms | Alex Kipman

12th - Higher Ed
explore a speculative digital world without screens in this fanciful demo, a mix of near reality and far-future possibility. Wearing the HoloLens headset, Alex Kipman demos his vision for bringing 3D holograms into the real world,...
Instructional Video18:37
TED Talks

TED: 4 ways to make a city more walkable | Jeff Speck

12th - Higher Ed
Freedom from cars, freedom from sprawl, freedom to walk your city! City planner Jeff Speck shares his "general theory of walkability" -- four planning principles to transform sprawling cities of six-lane highways and 600-foot blocks into...
Instructional Video12:08
TED Talks

John Graham-Cumming: The greatest machine that never was

12th - Higher Ed
Computer science began in the '30s ... the 1830s. John Graham-Cumming tells the story of Charles Babbage's mechanical, steam-powered "analytical engine" and how Ada Lovelace, mathematician and daughter of Lord Byron, saw beyond its...
Instructional Video3:36
SciShow

AI vs. Human: The Greatest Go Tournament Ever

12th - Higher Ed
Google's 'AlphaGo' and the world's top ranked Go player go head-to-head in a battle to decide whether or not an AI can be programmed to win a game as complicated as Go.
Instructional Video5:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Train Heist | Think Like A Coder, Ep 4 | Alex Rosenthal

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This is episode 4 of our animated series "Think Like A Coder." This 10-episode narrative follows a girl, Ethic, and her robot companion, Hedge, as they attempt to save the world. The two embark on a quest to collect three artifacts and...
Instructional Video20:12
TED Talks

Bran Ferren: To create for the ages, let's combine art and engineering

12th - Higher Ed
When Bran Ferren was just 9, his parents took him to see the Pantheon in Rome — and it changed everything. In that moment, he began to understand how the tools of science and engineering become more powerful when combined with art, with...
Instructional Video15:54
TED Talks

TED: How we explore unanswered questions in physics | James Beacham

12th - Higher Ed
James Beacham looks for answers to the most important open questions of physics using the biggest science experiment ever mounted, CeRN's Large Hadron Collider. In this fun and accessible talk about how science happens, Beacham takes us...
Instructional Video3:04
SciShow

The Curiosity Rover Landing

12th - Higher Ed
Landing will take place the night of August 5th, 1:30 AM eastern, 10:30 pm pacific, and 6:30 AM GMT (August 6th.) The Mars Science Laboratory or Curiosity Rover is the largest payload ever delivered to the surface of a planet and it has...
Instructional Video6:34
MinutePhysics

Length Contraction and Time Dilation | Special Relativity Ch. 5

12th - Higher Ed
This video is chapter 5 in my series on special relativity, and it covers how things that are moving (that is, moving relative to an inertial reference frame) at different speeds appear to be shorter in length... and longer in length....
Instructional Video4:09
SciShow

The First Robot Swarm, and Evolution's Misfit

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares the nuts-and-bolts of the world’s first robot swarm, and explains what the creepy, cute and extinct animal known as Hallucigenia can teach us about evolution.
Instructional Video10:48
SciShow

5 Bizarre Aircraft That Pushed the Boundaries of Engineering

12th - Higher Ed
You might think most planes look the same, but here are five of the most bizarre aircraft that, no matter their appearance, still managed to fly. Chapters SR-71 BLACKBIRD 1:20 GRUMMAN X-29 3:01 AERO SPACELINES 377PG 5:14 BOEING...
Instructional Video6:29
TED Talks

TED: How germs travel on planes -- and how we can stop them | Raymond Wang

12th - Higher Ed
Raymond Wang is only 17 years old, but he's already helping to build a healthier future. using fluid dynamics, he created computational simulations of how air moves on airplanes, and what he found is disturbing -- when a person sneezes...
Instructional Video13:19
TED Talks

TED: Success stories from Kenya's first makerspace | Kamau Gachigi

12th - Higher Ed
Africa needs engineers, but its engineering students often end up working at auditing firms and banks. Why? Kamau Gachigi suspects it's because they don't have the spaces and materials needed to test their ideas and start businesses. To...
Instructional Video13:01
TED Talks

TED: The warmth and wisdom of mud buildings | Anna Heringer

12th - Higher Ed
There are a lot of resources given by nature for free -- all we need is our sensitivity to see them and our creativity to use them, says architect Anna Heringer. Heringer uses low-tech materials like mud and bamboo to create structures...
Instructional Video9:53
TED Talks

TED: What you need to know about CRISPR | Ellen Jorgensen

12th - Higher Ed
Should we bring back the wooly mammoth? Or edit a human embryo? Or wipe out an entire species that we consider harmful? The genome-editing technology CRISPR has made extraordinary questions like these legitimate -- but how does it work?...
Instructional Video15:32
TED Talks

TED: The unexpected benefit of celebrating failure | Astro Teller

12th - Higher Ed
Great dreams aren't just visions, says Astro Teller, "They're visions coupled to strategies for making them real." The head of X (formerly Google X), Teller takes us inside the "moonshot factory," as it's called, where his team seeks to...
Instructional Video2:06
MinutePhysics

Shells of Cosmic Time (ft. @AstroKatie)

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to @AstroKatie (http://astrokatie.com) for the collaboration! This video is about the cosmic distance scale and how we see objects farther away in space (ie at higher red shift) farther back in time because light takes time to...
Instructional Video5:20
MinutePhysics

The Twins Paradox Hands-On Explanation | Special Relativity Ch. 8

12th - Higher Ed
This video is chapter 8 in my series on special relativity, and it presents a hands-on explanation of the resolution to the Twins Paradox using the mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe....
Instructional Video8:03
TED Talks

TED: How autonomous flying taxis could change the way you travel | Rodin Lyasoff

12th - Higher Ed
Flight is about to get a lot more personal, says aviation entrepreneur Rodin Lyasoff. In this visionary talk, he imagines a new golden age of air travel in which small, autonomous air taxis allow us to bypass traffic jams and...