Instructional Video6:25
SciShow

What Shape Are Black Holes? Yes.

12th - Higher Ed
What shape is the event horizon of a black hole? Well, the answer to that question changes if our universe is hiding an extra dimension (or more). Black holes could come in an infinite number of shapes — including a precisely spinning...
Instructional Video6:23
SciShow

Launching Rockets Mid-Air

12th - Higher Ed
If you picture a rocket launch, do you imagine it taking off from a hot air balloon? In this episode, we'll learn how using balloons to launch sounding rockets advanced our understanding of planet Earth, radiation, and how to keep...
Instructional Video4:29
MinutePhysics

A Better Way To Picture Atoms

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about using Bohmian trajectories to visualize the wavefunctions of hydrogen orbitals, rendered in 3D using custom python code in Blender.
Instructional Video2:48
SciShow

3 Things Your Dog Should Not Be Doing

12th - Higher Ed
Dogs do a lot of weird things, and sometimes they’re funny enough to post on Tumblr. But before you do, make sure li’l Scamp isn’t doing any of these three things -- because they spell trouble.
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

Why Don’t Jellyfish Look Like That?

12th - Higher Ed
When you think of a jellyfish, do you imagine an angelic stingy blob? That's just one stage of the life of a jelly!
Instructional Video2:00
SciShow

What Does Ultrasound Gel Do?

12th - Higher Ed
You may have had an ultrasound before, and wondered what that gel does. Well, that weird alien goop has a purpose, and it has to do with being like our weird human skin.
Instructional Video3:28
SciShow

How Does a Photon Become a Film Photo?

12th - Higher Ed
The chemistry behind film photography is pretty fascinating. How do film cameras help us turn light into a physical image?
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow

DeepDream: Inside Google's 'Daydreaming' Computers

12th - Higher Ed
It may produce creepy images with way too many dogs and eyeballs, but Google’s DeepDream program is actually a valuable window into artificial intelligence.
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

The Science of a Selfie

12th - Higher Ed
Taking photos used to require technical knowledge and time in a lab, but now we have electronic devices in our pockets that do all of the work for us. How do these miracle devices do it? Hosted by: Olivia Gordon
Instructional Video14:58
SciShow

Meet the Mad Haterpillar with Henry Reich from Minute Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Hank faces off against Minute Physics's Henry Reich in a battle of eccentricities, fashion, and plant puns.
Instructional Video11:36
SciShow

5 Times Evolution Did Its Best

12th - Higher Ed
Usually when you think of evolution or natural selection, you think of survival of the fittest. But sometimes, the resulting traits of evolution aren’t the most efficient solutions to the problems at hand. With the bar set to “good...
Instructional Video4:12
SciShow

Now We Can Turn Your Thoughts Into Reality

12th - Higher Ed
How is it that you can be looking at a distinct object in front of you, yet picture something entirely different in your mind? The inner workings of what’s happening in our brains to allow this is a puzzle that scientists are now...
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

New Insights Into 'The Mind's Eye'

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow explores a newly identified neurological condition, aphantasia, the inability to visualize things in your imagination, and gives tribute to Dr. Oliver Sacks, popular explorer of the human mind.
Instructional Video6:54
SciShow Kids

Telescopes in Space! | How We Study Space | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Anthony and Squeaks find out how you can put telescopes in different places to help you see further away and get better pictures of things in space!
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow Kids

Looking at the Earth! | How We Study Space | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
If you were looking down at the Earth from space, what would you be able to see? Do you think you would be able to see your house? What if you were super far away?
Instructional Video10:29
TED Talks

TED: Does AI actually understand us? | Alona Fyshe

12th - Higher Ed
Is AI as smart as it seems? Exploring the "brain" behind machine learning, neural networker Alona Fyshe delves into the language processing abilities of talkative tech (like the groundbreaking chatbot and internet obsession ChatGPT) and...
News Clip6:52
PBS

How the view of an ancient world landmark has sparked a modern legal battle

12th - Higher Ed
Greece’s highest court is considering a case about Athenians’ visual access to the landmark Acropolis. Its decision could set a precedent about preserving historic skylines -- and potentially ban construction of high-rise buildings. The...
News Clip3:40
PBS

Why a grandmother and grandson are visiting every U.S. national park

12th - Higher Ed
92-year-old Joy Ryan and her grandson Brad Ryan have spent the past seven years crisscrossing the U.S. with the goal of visiting every national park. “Grandma Joy’s Road Trip,” as they call it on social media, began after Brad found out...
Instructional Video8:35
SciShow

Tracking Plant Genetics Through Art

12th - Higher Ed
Just like animals, plants evolve and change over time. And you might think we'd be looking for things like fossils to figure out how they've changed, but some scientists are using a far less traditional resource: art.
Instructional Video12:00
PBS

Hawking Radiation

12th - Higher Ed
It's the most famous prediction of perhaps the most famous genius of our time ... Stephen Hawking's theory of Hawking Radiation.
Instructional Video11:35
SciShow

5 Times Evolution Should Have Planned Ahead

12th - Higher Ed
Natural selection can lead to some pretty amazing adaptations, but sometimes the resulting traits aren’t the most efficient solutions to the problems at hand. With the bar set to “good enough,” here are some features that arose from...
Instructional Video3:24
SciShow

This is NOT What Evolution Looks Like

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains where that over-simplified image of evolution comes from and what it is actually supposed to mean.
Instructional Video3:29
MinutePhysics

Why are Stars Star-Shaped

12th - Higher Ed
Why are Stars Star-Shaped
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Music and math: The genius of Beethoven - Natalya St. Clair

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How is it that Beethoven, who is celebrated as one of the most significant composers of all time, wrote many of his most beloved songs while going deaf? The answer lies in the math behind his music. Natalya St. Clair employs the...