Instructional Video7:09
Physics Girl

5 Science Tricks w/ Explanation

9th - 12th
Last week I posed a video with 5 awesome physics party tricks. This week, Jabril from SEFD came on to help explain the experiments as we test them out for the first time and work through some of the amusing kinks in the process. Any...
Instructional Video2:18
Science360

Green office holiday party tips - Green Holidays

12th - Higher Ed
Sue Van Hook of Ecovative Design discusses sustainable packaging and how to be more "green" while decorating for your office party.
Instructional Video3:33
Science360

Chemical investigations -- early concept brain research

12th - Higher Ed
Dopamine is a special chemical, neurologically speaking. The neurotransmitter is crucial for decision-making, learning, movement and more. Scientists know that varying dopamine levels affect neurons, but don’t yet have a method to...
Instructional Video2:32
The Backyard Scientist

Molten Aluminum Vs. 15 gallons of Sprite

K - 5th
In this video I wanted to see what happens if I poured molten aluminum into a carbonated liquid. Would it fall faster, or slower? Would it explode?! Then I poured molten tin into water to watch it explode in super slow motion.
Instructional Video4:43
Science360

Computer scientist Scott Aaronson researches quantum computers

12th - Higher Ed
Scott Aaronson is a computer scientist at MIT who studies computational limits and quantum computers. He has been awarded the 2012 Alan T. Waterman Award
Instructional Video5:02
Science360

Grip - Science of Speed

12th - Higher Ed
There's one thing every driver always want more of: Grip. Grip is the frictional force that holds the tires on the track, but crew chiefs like Steve Letarte describe it as a 'warm and fuzzy feeling' when you have it. Whether mechanical...
Instructional Video3:17
Science360

Vying for the Termite Throne

12th - Higher Ed
Battles between colonies are a clue to an evolutionary puzzle: Why are whole classes of termites sterile? Social insects--ants, bees, wasps and termites in particular--can have over a million sterile and/or non-reproductive workers and...
Instructional Video3:21
Science360

Plasma cutter with pencil lead - Little Shop of Physics

12th - Higher Ed
A mechanical pencil lead is used to make a small-scale plasma cutter, cutting shapes in aluminum foil. Parts Needed 4 9 V battery 2 Clip leads 1 5 mm pencil lead Aluminum foil Box or tub Rubber band This demonstration is only for the...
Instructional Video3:03
Science360

Engineering and Music: A Powerful Duet for Art and Science - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
University of Rochester electrical engineer Mark Bocko has combined his passion for music with his passion for engineering, devising a way to digitally reproduce music in files 1,000 times smaller than an mp3! But along with this new...
Instructional Video3:32
Science360

Beginning The Model - Climate Modeling

12th - Higher Ed
How do you begin to model the climate?
Instructional Video4:54
The Backyard Scientist

Chlorobutanol Synthesis

K - 5th
Recrystallize in enough methanol to dissolve, then place in refrigerator for large crystals (4 days) OR freezer for smaller (4-8 hours). do multiple smaller pulls. 90ml acetone 10ml chloroform 1-2gm NaOH Yield~ 4gm Please note this is...
Instructional Video3:21
The Backyard Scientist

Bouncy Liquid Metal

K - 5th
I saw this video online, and wanted to try it out for myself. Hope you enjoy!
Instructional Video5:14
Science360

Computer scientist and Watson co-creator David Ferrucci - ScienceLives

12th - Higher Ed
When David Ferrucci was introduced to computer programming as a high school student questions flooded his mind … Where does it stop? What can I get the computer to do? "My mind immediately went to the idea of artificial intelligence ......
Instructional Video1:49
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Andrew W. Lo - Teachers Make a Difference - Mrs. Barbara Ficalora

Higher Ed
Prior to MIT Sloan, he taught at the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School as the W.P. Carey Assistant Professor of Finance from 1984 to 1987, and as the W.P. Carey Associate Professor of Finance from 1987 to 1988. His research...
Instructional Video3:56
Science360

Harnessing the potential of architected materials - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Academic and industry collaboration explores new architected materials with novel and customized behaviors With support from NSF, engineers Pablo Zavattieri and Santiago Pujol of Purdue University and Nilesh Mankame of General Motors...
Instructional Video4:59
Science360

Human Water Cycle - Wastewater

12th - Higher Ed
Water. It's an essential building block of life, constantly moving in a hydrologic cycle that flows in a continuous loop above, across and even below the Earth's surface. But water is also constantly moving through another cycle -- the...
Instructional Video0:42
Science Sparks

Make your own motorised car

K - 5th
Find how out to make an easy motorised car using a motor, elastic band, batteries and wheels and axles
Instructional Video4:52
Science360

Science Behind The News: Impacts On Jupiter

12th - Higher Ed
The impact of comets on the surface of Jupiter are a fairly common experience. At the University of Central Florida, astronomers Joseph Harrington and Csaba Palotai are leading a project that studies precisely how these impacts happen,...
Instructional Video4:17
Science360

Supercomputers Assist In Climate Forecasting - Innovators

12th - Higher Ed
Responding to the challenge of climate change requires understanding more about climate variability and the changes expected. Jim Kinter, director of the Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies (COLA), explains how scientists there are...
Instructional Video0:27
Science Sparks

Spooky Mirror Writing

K - 5th
Spooky mirror writing for Halloween. Can you write a message backwards?
Instructional Video1:10
Science360

What is the relationship between food, energy and water?

12th - Higher Ed
What is the relationship between food, energy and water? Jack Brouwer of University of California, Irvine, answers the question on this edition of "Ask a Scientist." The number of humans alive on our planet today is 7.6 billion. By 2087,...
Instructional Video5:46
Science360

Math and its infinite connections - Scientists & Engineers on Sofas (and other furnishings)

12th - Higher Ed
Two parts math and one part writer make Jordan Ellenberg a very readable mathematician. Yes, Ellenberg is a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with a Ph.D. in mathematics from Harvard that allows him to...
Instructional Video2:51
Science360

New LHC detector technology - Engineering the ATLAS IBL

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists and engineers installed a new component in the core of the ATLAS detector--one of two general-purpose detectors at the Large Hadron Collider. This new component, called the Insertable B-Layer, sits merely centimeters from the...
Instructional Video2:33
Science360

Dead Zones in the Ocean - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Ocean "dead zones" along the Washington and Oregon coasts are threatening critical U.S. fishing areas. These oxygen-depleted regions, that lose virtually all of their marine life in the summer, are expanding, and new ones are appearing...