Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

Hilde Mangold and the Organizer of Life | Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Experiments conducted by Hilde Mangold and Hans Spemann taught us how an animal develops from a small ball of cells into an organism with distinct, functioning parts. The work was a foundational contribution to the field of developmental...
Instructional Video12:24
SciShow

5 Scientists with Ideas That Nobody Believed ... Who Were Right

12th - Higher Ed
People have struggled to understand some hypotheses scientists had, which are correct but were disclaimed back then. So here’s the 5 scientists and their ideas that nobody believed. Chapters 0:00 0:07 0:15 0:23 0:30 0:38
Instructional Video9:55
SciShow

6 Stupid and Dangerous Things Scientists Did to Themselves

12th - Higher Ed
From poking their own eyes, to drinking a patient's vomit, some extremely passionate scientists have done pretty outrageous things to themselves in the name of science.
Instructional Video9:04
SciShow

The Worst Nobel Prize Ever Awarded

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow explores the grim story of the lobotomy, the medical procedure that earned its inventor perhaps the most regrettable Nobel Prize in history.
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

Hiding a Nobel Prize From the Nazis

12th - Higher Ed
To keep their solid gold Nobel Prizes away from the Nazis, James Franck and Max von Laue sent their medals to trusted colleague Niels Bohr. But when Germany invaded Denmark in 1940, the medals were no longer safe - so chemist George de...
Instructional Video4:27
SciShow

The 8 Smartest People of the Year: 2013's Nobel Winners

12th - Higher Ed
Hank profiles this year's Nobel laureates in science, whose achievements have helped us understand questions as small as how our cells transport materials, and as big as why matter exists at all.
Instructional Video8:59
SciShow

Richard Feynman, The Great Explainer: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Like SciShow? Help support us, and also get things to put on your walls, cover your torso, or hold your liquids! Chapters View all GREAT EXPLAINERS 0:26 QUANTUM MECHANICS 2:54 THEORETICAL PHYSICS 3:04 PRANKING OTHER PHYSICISTS 3:55...
Instructional Video25:47
SciShow

5 Great Minds to Celebrate in 2021 and Beyond | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
To ring in 2021, we want to celebrate some of the greatest minds in science — folks who have contributed to our understanding of the world and in some cases saved lives along the way!
Instructional Video10:15
SciShow

How Machines the Size of Molecules Could Change the World

12th - Higher Ed
Future advances in engineering may come from chemistry. From molecular motors to salt-shaker-drug-deliverers, the future looks small.
Instructional Video4:36
SciShow

The Scientist Who Made the Internet Possible | Great Minds: Narinder Singh Kapany

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to Qualcomm for sponsoring a portion of this video.
Instructional Video21:44
TED Talks

Brian Greene: Is our universe the only universe?

12th - Higher Ed
Is there more than one universe? In this visually rich, action-packed talk, Brian Greene shows how the unanswered questions of physics (starting with a big one: What caused the Big Bang?) have led to the theory that our own universe is...
Instructional Video11:13
TED Talks

TED: How a long-forgotten virus could help us solve the antibiotics crisis | Alexander Belcredi

12th - Higher Ed
Viruses have a bad reputation -- but some of them could one day save your life, says biotech entrepreneur Alexander Belcredi. In this fascinating talk, he introduces us to phages, naturally-occurring viruses that hunt and kill harmful...
Instructional Video4:20
SciShow

The 2015 Nobel Prizes!

12th - Higher Ed
Over the past few weeks, the Nobel committees have been announcing the 2015 laureates. This year’s winners in the physics and chemistry categories made discoveries about the tiny neutrinos flying through all of us, and the ways our...
Instructional Video18:05
TED Talks

Juan Enriquez: The age of genetic wonder

12th - Higher Ed
Gene-editing tools like CRISPR enable us to program life at its most fundamental level. But this raises some pressing questions: If we can generate new species from scratch, what should we build? Should we redesign humanity as we know...
Instructional Video9:06
TED Talks

TED: The 4 a.m. mystery | Rives

12th - Higher Ed
Poet Rives does 8 minutes of lyrical origami, folding history into a series of coincidences surrounding that most surreal of hours, 4 o'clock in the morning.
Instructional Video6:41
SciShow

What Really Happened the First Time We Split a Heavy Atom in Half

12th - Higher Ed
When scientists first split the atom, they didn't realize what they'd done until physicist Lise Meitner figured out they had discovered what we now call nuclear fission.
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 Video16:16
TED Talks

Albert-László Barabási: The real relationship between your age and your chance of success

12th - Higher Ed
Backed by mathematical analysis, network theorist Albert-László Barabási explores the hidden mechanisms that drive success -- no matter your field -- and uncovers an intriguing connection between your age and your chance of making it big.
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

What Fruit Flies Taught Us About Human Biology

12th - Higher Ed
For creatures that look nothing like us, fruit flies have been able to teach us a lot about human biology as we’ve studied them over the past century.
Instructional Video4:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do your knuckles pop? - Eleanor Nelsen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Some people love the feeling of cracking their knuckles, while others cringe at the sound. But what causes that trademark pop? And is it dangerous? Eleanor Nelsen gives the facts behind joint popping.
Instructional Video3:52
Bozeman Science

What is the HHMI? Why is it amazing?

12th - Higher Ed
I visited the Howard Hughes Medical Institute last week.
Instructional Video12:10
TED Talks

TED: The emergent patterns of climate change | Gavin Schmidt

12th - Higher Ed
You can't understand climate change in pieces, says climate scientist Gavin Schmidt. It's the whole, or it's nothing. In this illuminating talk, he explains how he studies the big picture of climate change with mesmerizing models that...
Instructional Video9:02
SciShow

Fritz Haber: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Hank introduces us to the brilliant and heartless Fritz Haber, a great mind who is considered "the father chemical warfare," but who also made discoveries and innovations that helped lead to the Green Revolution which is credited with...
Instructional Video3:56
SciShow

The Man Who Tried to Give Himself An Ulcer... For Science

12th - Higher Ed
In 1984, Dr. Barry Marshall had a theory about ulcers that he couldn't convince the science community of. So, he took matters into his own hands... or stomach, and infected himself with a potentially deadly bacterium.