Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do airplanes stay in the air? | Raymond Adkins

Pre-K - Higher Ed
By 1917, Albert Einstein had explained the relationship between space and time. But, that year, he designed a flawed airplane wing. His attempt was based on an incomplete theory of how flight works. Indeed, insufficient and inaccurate...
Instructional Video10:34
PBS

The Geometry of Causality

12th - Higher Ed
Using geometry we can not only understand, but visualize how causality dictates the order of events in our universe.
Instructional Video11:20
PBS

Anti-Matter and Quantum Relativity

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Dirac's insights into the nature of Quantum Mechanics laid the foundation for Quantum Field Theory and predicted the existence of anti-matter. Part 1 in our series on Quantum Field Theory.
Instructional Video3:30
Bozeman Science

Mass and Energy

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how mass can be converted to energy and energy can be converted to mass. The equation E=mc2 can be used to determine the amount of energy released from nuclear processes.
Instructional Video9:58
SciShow

10 Things We Didn't Know 100 Years Ago

12th - Higher Ed
In just the last century, we've made an astounding amount of scientific progress. And thanks to some of that progress, we can now share 10 of those discoveries with you in a video on the internet!
Instructional Video6:48
Be Smart

Theory vs Hypothesis vs Law

12th - Higher Ed
Some people try to attack things like evolution by natural selection and man-made climate change by saying "Oh, that's just a THEORY!" Yes, they are both theories. Stop saying it like it's a bad thing! It's time we learn the difference...
Instructional Video19:07
TED Talks

TED: Making sense of string theory | Brian Greene

12th - Higher Ed
Physicist Brian Greene explains superstring theory, the idea that minscule strands of energy vibrating in 11 dimensions create every particle and force in the universe.
Instructional Video5:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Einstein's miracle year - Larry Lagerstrom

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As the year 1905 began, Albert Einstein faced life as a "failed" academic. Yet within the next twelve months, he would publish four extraordinary papers, each on a different topic, that were destined to radically transform our...
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow

How We Make the Coldest Things in the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
If you want to make atoms THIS cold, you can’t just stick them in the freezer…you’ll need to take advantage of quantum mechanics!
Instructional Video7:14
Be Smart

Is Space A Thing?

12th - Higher Ed
Since the days of Ancient Greece, philosophers and scientists have been wondering: What is space? Is the absence of things.... a thing? These questions continued to fascinate physicists in the modern era, leading Isaac Newton, Ernst...
Instructional Video12:25
PBS

White Holes

12th - Higher Ed
Lurking in the depths of the mathematics of Einstein's general relativity is an object even stranger than the mysterious black hole. In fact it's the black hole's mirror twin, the white hole. Some even think that these could be the...
Instructional Video19:10
TED Talks

Naomi Oreskes: Why we should trust scientists

12th - Higher Ed
Many of the world's biggest problems require asking questions of scientists -- but why should we believe what they say? Historian of science Naomi Oreskes thinks deeply about our relationship to belief and draws out three problems with...
Instructional Video17:21
TED Talks

Tim Harford: A powerful way to unleash your natural creativity

12th - Higher Ed
What can we learn from the world's most enduringly creative people? They "slow-motion multitask," actively juggling multiple projects and moving between topics as the mood strikes -- without feeling hurried. Author Tim Harford shares how...
Instructional Video2:01
SciShow

Dark Energy Camera

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us news of the most sensitive digital camera in the universe, poised to help astronomers explain the mystery of why the universe is speeding up instead of slowing down as Einstein's theory of General Relativity would predict.
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

How We Learned Black Holes Actually Exist | 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know Einstein never thought we’d find actual black holes in space? It took decades of research to show black holes are physically possible, and some of the scientists behind that research were honored this year with the Nobel...
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 Video3:36
SciShow

The Theory of Everything...A Little Bit Closer

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains how a recent astronomical discovery made in Antarctica could change what we know about the birth of the universe, and the rules of physics that govern it.
Instructional Video4:09
SciShow

The Kugelblitz: A Black Hole Made From Light

12th - Higher Ed
Can you make a black hole out of light? Learn about the strange theoretical object called the 'Kugelblitz'.
Instructional Video4:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is imposter syndrome and how can you combat it? - Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Even after writing eleven books and winning several awards, Maya Angelou couldn't escape the doubt that she hadn't earned her accomplishments. This feeling of fraudulence is extremely common. Why can't so many of us shake feelings that...
Instructional Video9:38
PBS

Have Gravitational Waves Been Discovered?!?

12th - Higher Ed
For the past 90 years, the predictions laid out Einstein's general theory of relativity have continued to be confirmed by experimental science. The last hold out is gravitational waves - the idea that certain gravitational events cause...
Instructional Video15:49
TED Talks

Krista Tippett: Reconnecting with compassion

12th - Higher Ed
The term "compassion" -- typically reserved for the saintly or the sappy -- has fallen out of touch with reality. At a special TEDPrize@UN, journalist Krista Tippett deconstructs the meaning of compassion through several moving stories,...
Instructional Video17:36
TED Talks

TED: The sound the universe makes | Janna Levin

12th - Higher Ed
We think of space as a silent place. But physicist Janna Levin says the universe has a soundtrack -- a sonic composition that records some of the most dramatic events in outer space. (Black holes, for instance, bang on spacetime like a...
Instructional Video18:04
TED Talks

Robert Thurman: Expanding your circle of compassion

12th - Higher Ed
It's hard to always show compassion -- even to the people we love, but Robert Thurman asks that we develop compassion for our enemies. He prescribes a seven-step meditation exercise to extend compassion beyond our inner circle.
Instructional Video1:38
MinutePhysics

2011 Nobel Prize - Dark Energy feat. Sean Carroll

12th - Higher Ed
Guest narrator Sean Carroll of Caltech describes dark energy and the acceleration of the universe, the discovery of which was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics on October 4th.