Instructional Video3:30
SciShow

New Views of a Comet, and 5 Ancient Planets Discovered

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News serves up the latest pictures from Comet 67-P, that media darling, and the discovery of what may be the oldest, rocky Earth-like worlds yet found.
Instructional Video3:34
TED Talks

Sonaar Luthra: Meet the Water Canary

12th - Higher Ed
After a crisis, how can we tell if water is safe to drink? Current tests are slow and complex, and the delay can be deadly, as in the cholera outbreak after Haiti's earthquake in 2010. TED Fellow Sonaar Luthra previews his design for a...
Instructional Video3:06
MinuteEarth

Dangerous Marshmallows?!

12th - Higher Ed
Burning a marshmallow can release more energy than detonating an equal mass of TNT...so why isn't a marshmallow as dangerous?
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 Video5:33
SciShow

How Saturn's Moons Could Help Us Live in Space

12th - Higher Ed
As we continue our search for life out in the universe, it's important that we leave no stone, or moon, unturned.
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How plants tell time - Dasha Savage

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Morning glories unfurl their petals like clockwork in the early morning. A closing white waterlily signals that it's late afternoon. And moon flowers, as their name suggests, only bloom under the night sky. What gives plants this innate...
Instructional Video28:02
SciShow

5 Unusual Places to Look for Life | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
From "superhabitable planets" that can potentially sustain life longer than earth to rogue planets that don't even orbit a star, we’ve talked about some strange places that could host extraterrestrial life over the last few years. Here...
Instructional Video5:04
SciShow

The Key to Finding Life Elsewhere in the Universe: Purple Planets?!?

12th - Higher Ed
Some scientists believe that 3.6 billion years ago Earth might have been purple, and that theory is giving us some clues in our search for life in the universe.
Instructional Video17:35
TED Talks

Siddhartha Mukherjee: Soon we'll cure diseases with a cell, not a pill

12th - Higher Ed
Current medical treatment boils down to six words: Have disease, take pill, kill something. But physician Siddhartha Mukherjee points to a future of medicine that will transform the way we heal.
Instructional Video7:42
SciShow

Batteries: A Big Idea That Turned on the World

12th - Higher Ed
Even though they power many of our modern conveniences, batteries have a long history. Hank explains how and why these marvels work and what they've been used for over the past 2,000 years!
Instructional Video35:24
SciShow

A Brief History of Life: Dinosaur Time!

12th - Higher Ed
The Great Dying hit life hard, but the species that survived took over the planet and diversified into many interesting forms, including the dinosaurs!
Instructional Video8:56
Crash Course

Kinetics: Chemistry's Demolition Derby - Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever been to a Demolition Derby? Then you have an idea of how molecular collisions happen. In this episode, Hank talks about collisions between molecules and atoms, activation energy, writing rate laws, equilibrium expressions,...
Instructional Video11:40
Crash Course

Thermodynamics: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
It's time to heat things up! LITERALLY! It's time for Hank to talk about the history of Thermodynamics!!! It's messy and there are a lot of people who came up with some ideas that worked and other that didn't and then some ideas that...
Instructional Video9:54
Crash Course

Equilibrium: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode of Crash Course Chemistry, Hank goes over the ideas of keeping your life balance... well, your chemical life. Equilibrium is all about balance and today Hank discusses Chemical Equilibrium, Concentration, Temperature, and...
Instructional Video9:07
Bozeman Science

Compartmentalization

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how eukaryotic cells use compartmentalization to increase the surface area and level of specialization within the cell. Prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells are compared and contrasted. The role of both the mitochodria...
Instructional Video10:24
Crash Course

Enthalpy: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Energy is like the bestest best friend ever and yet, most of the time we take it for granted. Hank feels bad for our friend and wants us to learn more about it so that we can understand what it's trying to tell us - like that any bond...
Instructional Video12:08
Crash Course

Alcohols, Ethers, and Epoxides: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
What comes to mind when you think of alcohol? Probably alcoholic drinks like beer or wine. But in organic chemistry alcohols are an important and versatile family of compounds. In this episode of Crash Course Organic Chemistry, we’ll use...
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow Kids

Why Does Cooking Eggs Make Them Hard?

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks grab a snack and learn all about why boiling eggs makes them hard! Second Grade Next Generation Science Standards Disciplinary Core Ideas: PS1.A: Structure and Properties of Matter - Different kinds of matter exist and...
Instructional Video11:12
Bozeman Science

Nuclear Reactions

12th - Higher Ed
Mr. Andersen contrasts nuclear reactions to chemical reactions. He explains the four main forces of nature; including gravity, electromagnetism, strong, and weak nuclear forces. He also explains how fusion differs from fission.
Instructional Video12:57
Bozeman Science

Life Requires Free Energy

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen describes how free energy is used by organisms to grow, maintain order, and reproduce. A brief discussion of the first and second law of thermodynamics is also included. Disruptions in the amount of free energy can cause...
Instructional Video5:01
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: From DNA to Silly Putty, the diverse world of polymers - Jan Mattingly

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You are made of polymers, and so are trees and telephones and toys. A polymer is a long chain of identical molecules (or monomers) with a range of useful properties, like toughness or stretchiness -- and it turns out, we just can't live...
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

The Deal with Protein

12th - Higher Ed
People like to say all kinds of things about protein – like, you need to eat lots of it to build muscle and lose weight. The truth is, the science of protein and how your body uses it is much more complicated than that.
Instructional Video12:14
Crash Course

The New Chemistry: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
One of the problems with the whole idea of a single Scientific Revolution is that some disciplines decided not to join any revolution. And others just took a long time to get there.
Instructional Video10:41
Crash Course

Alkene Redox Reactions - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Oxidation-reduction reactions are going on around us, and inside us, all the time, and we can make redox reactions in organic chemistry easier to understand by tracking carbon-oxygen bonds. In this episode of Crash Course Organic...