Instructional Video6:11
SciShow

How Ancient Babylonians Predicted Eclipses

12th - Higher Ed
There's an eclipse coming up in April of 2024! You'd think it takes a lot of modern technology for us to know about it, but it turns out that humans have been able to predict eclipses for nearly three thousand years. And we've been using...
Instructional Video3:50
MinuteEarth

Eclipses Used To Be Terrifying

12th - Higher Ed
Because eclipses are powerful and frightening events, ancient cultures went to great lengths to understand eclipses, leading to remarkably accurate predictions and helping invent the science of astronomy.
Instructional Video13:36
SciShow

Don’t Look At the Sun! …Unless | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
It’s common knowledge that you should never look directly at the sun. But, like, what about during an eclipse? Surely you can look then?
Instructional Video13:32
PBS

The Strange Universe of Gravitational Lensing

12th - Higher Ed
Niels Bohr, a Danish Physicist said “Everything we call real is made of things that cannot be regarded .” Is what we see perceived to be real or is it an illusion? In the world of our mind’s eye, light travels in a straight line. In...
Instructional Video5:00
Be Smart

Do Other Planets Have Seasons Too?

12th - Higher Ed
Earth has seasons, but what about the rest of the planets in the solar system? Let’s take a tour from Mercury to Pluto and see what seasons would be like on all our planetary neighbors. Bring a sweater!
Instructional Video33:35
SciShow

Studying the Solar Eclipse: SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Jen Fowler of the Montana Space Grant Consortium joins us this week to talk about her work with weather balloons and the upcoming solar eclipse, and Jessi from Animal Wonders brings along Gaia the Southern Three-Banded Armadillo!
Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

Looking for Life During a Lunar Eclipse | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers took advantage of a lunar eclipse to study Earth as if it were an exoplanet, and Mars's Insight lander used seismic data to reveal for the first time boundaries between different layers of Mars.
Instructional Video2:54
SciShow Kids

Make an Eclipse Viewer!

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks show you how to make a pinhole viewer so you can safely watch the solar eclipse!
Instructional Video3:33
SciShow

A Year in Space, and the Lunar Eclipse!

12th - Higher Ed
Two astronauts are about to embark on the One Year Mission which can help us understand more about the long-term effects of being in space, and there is an upcoming total lunar eclipse (the shortest one this century)!
Instructional Video3:58
Instructional Video8:46
PBS

The Treasures of Trappist-1

12th - Higher Ed
Last week, seven earth-like planets were discovered orbiting a Red Dwarf star 39 light years away. Each one could be capable of supporting life.
Instructional Video3:46
SciShow

Why Solar Eclipses Create Those Crescent-Shaped Lights

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone is watching the sky during a solar eclipse, but but if you look down, you'll catch another kind of light show.
Instructional Video10:21
Crash Course

Eclipses

12th - Higher Ed
The big question in the comments last week was, "BUT WHAT ABOUT ECLIPSES?" Today, Phil breaks 'em down for you.
Instructional Video33:46
SciShow

Studying the Solar Eclipse: SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Jen Fowler of the Montana Space Grant Consortium joins us this week to talk about her work with weather balloons and the upcoming solar eclipse, and Jessi from Animal Wonders brings along Gaia the Southern Three-Banded Armadillo!
Instructional Video4:02
SciShow Kids

What Will Happen During the Solar Eclipse?

K - 5th
There's an Eclipse coming on August 21st, and Jessi and Squeaks are PUMPED! Today, they'll show you where in the world you'll be able to see the eclipse, what happens during an eclipse, and tell you how you can watch the eclipse safely!
Instructional Video8:55
PBS

The Great American Eclipse

12th - Higher Ed
Get your eclipse glasses ready because the a total solar eclipse is an astronomical event unlike any other.
Instructional Video5:48
SciShow

The 2017 Solar Eclipse: What You Need to Know

12th - Higher Ed
On August 21, 2017, the United States will experience its first total solar eclipse since 1979! If you're in the right place at the right time, you're in for a spectacular show!
Instructional Video2:34
SciShow Kids

2015's Solar Eclipse

K - 5th
In this episode of SciShow Kids, Jessi talks about solar eclipses, and in particular, the solar eclipse of 2015! Jessi will show you how eclipses occur and where the best places to view the eclipse are.
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Eclipses That Don't Eclipse

12th - Higher Ed
Here on Earth, we’re used to seeing both lunar and solar eclipses. But further out are eclipses that don’t behave at all the way we expected them to.
Instructional Video2:46
SciShow Kids

Lunar Eclipses

K - 5th
Did you know there will be a lunar eclipse this week? Jessi and Squeaks explore what causes lunar eclipses and why they can make the moon look red!
Instructional Video3:48
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What creates a total solar eclipse? - Andy Cohen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How can the tiny moon eclipse the sight of the gargantuan sun? By sheer coincidence, the disc of the sun is 400x larger than the disc of the moon, but the sun is 390x farther from Earth -- which means that when they align just right, the...
Instructional Video13:30
SciShow Kids

Getting Ready for the Eclipse!

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks are really excited about the total solar eclipse on August 21st, so they're revisiting all the amazing things they've learned about the sun, the moon, and how eclipses happen!
Instructional Video0:58
Curated Video

Eclipse, lunar

6th - 12th
An alignment of the Earth directly in between the Sun and the Moon, so that the earth's shadow falls on the Moon and obscures all or part of it. A Twig Science Glossary Film. Key scientific terms defined in just 60 seconds using stunning...
Instructional Video0:54
Curated Video

Eclipse, solar

6th - 12th
When the Moon is aligned directly in between the Sun and the Earth, it obscures all or part of the sun to an observer on the ground. A Twig Science Glossary Film. Key scientific terms defined in just 60 seconds using stunning images and...