Instructional Video12:12
Crash Course

The Aldol and Claisen Reactions: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Organic chemistry is a great workout for your brain, and to keep its energy up, your brain needs glucose. To maintain blood glucose levels, our bodies go through a process called gluconeogenesis, which involves the important type of...
Instructional Video5:58
SciShow

SPNs Might Change the World, So What Are They?

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers created a "super jelly" that can survive being run over with a car, and its weird properties take advantage of some novel chemistry.
Instructional Video6:07
SciShow

Maybe Life Doesn't Need Water, After All

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have been searching for alien life by honing in on the existence of liquid water, but we might be overlooking some types of life out there that doesn't need water at all.
Instructional Video11:13
SciShow

Blue Is Pretty Special: How Nature Gets the Blues

12th - Higher Ed
It's really difficult for life to create blue pigments, but the color can appear in a handful of compounds that create just the right conditions to reflect blue photons.
Instructional Video5:11
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is MSG, and is it actually bad for you? | Sarah E. Tracy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1968, Dr. Robert Ho Man Kwok felt ill after dinner at a Chinese restaurant and wrote a letter to a medical journal connecting his symptoms to MSG. His letter would change the world's relationship with MSG, inspiring international...
Instructional Video2:42
MinutePhysics

How Do We Know What Air is Like on Other Planets?

12th - Higher Ed
How do we know what the air is like on planets we haven't visited? This video explains how to see air from 150 light years away. Thanks to NASA's James Webb Space Telescope project at the Space Telescope Science Institute for supporting...
Instructional Video2:20
SciShow

Why Do Birds Have White And Dark Meat? (And Do We?)

12th - Higher Ed
Why do chickens and turkeys have white meat and dark meat? And, like, gross, but .. do humans have the same thing? It's all about our muscles: what they're made of, and what they're made for. Quick Questions has the answers!
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

Your Brain on Psilocybin

12th - Higher Ed
Humans have been taking psilocybin-containing mushrooms for centuries, but there has been recent research into the therapeutic possibilities of this molecule.
Instructional Video17:49
SciShow

Building New Molecules: SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Hank and PhD candidate Casey Massena go deep into the chemistry of a molecule that Casey helped create! Then Jessi joins the show to show off Ecuador, one of her many conures!
Instructional Video5:01
SciShow

Why Does COVID-19 Have So Many Symptoms?

12th - Higher Ed
For a respiratory disease, COVID-19 sure seems to affect more than just the respiratory system. Scientists think the receptor ACE2 is to blame.
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

Why People Keep Eating Tide Pods

12th - Higher Ed
Recently, you may have noticed a lot of memes on the Internet joking about eating Tide Laundry Pods. It was just a bit of absurdist fun until videos and stories started popping up of people actually eating them and experiencing some...
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

The Secrets Underneath Jupiter's Atmosphere

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve probed some 250 kilometers into Jupiter’s atmosphere, and that’s raised some new questions about the mysterious planet. And we’ve taken another important step in looking for life on Mars by using a common chemistry process for the...
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 Video3:03
TED Talks

Lee Cronin: Print your own medicine

12th - Higher Ed
Chemist Lee Cronin is working on a 3D printer that, instead of objects, is able to print molecules. An exciting potential long-term application: printing your own medicine using chemical inks.
Instructional Video4:30
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The bug that poops candy | George Zaidan

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Aphids can reproduce incredibly fast: they can make 20 new generations within a single season. And that means lots of poop. Some aphid populations can produce hundreds of kilograms of poop per acre— making them some of the most prolific...
Instructional Video5:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How quantum mechanics explains global warming - Lieven Scheire

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You've probably heard that carbon dioxide is warming the Earth. But how exactly is it doing it? Lieven Scheire uses a rainbow, a light bulb and a bit of quantum physics to describe the science behind global warming.
Instructional Video3:19
SciShow

Why Does Cold Weather Kill Your Phone?

12th - Higher Ed
If you live in a cold climate, you might know the agony of trying to get your car started on a chilly winter morning, or standing helplessly by as your phone's battery level plummets. So why do cold weather and batteries seem to just not...
Instructional Video2:27
MinuteEarth

Why Is Poop Brown And Pee Yellow?

12th - Higher Ed
The pigments in our food all get destroyed on their way through our digestive system...so where do the colors of our poop and pee come from? ________________________ FYI: We try to leave jargon out of our videos, but if you want to learn...
Instructional Video9:50
Crash Course

Orbitals: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode of Crash Course Chemistry, Hank discusses what Molecules actually look like and why, some quantum-mechanical three dimensional wave functions are explored, he touches on hybridization, and delves into sigma and pi bonds....
Instructional Video10:44
SciShow

What Glowing Fish and Your Dress Shirt Have in Common

12th - Higher Ed
Fluorescent molecules are useful for a lot more than just making you look cool at your local rave. Fluorescence turns out to be a kind of chemical superpower that lets us tackle all kinds of problems, from solving crimes to saving lives!
Instructional Video12:44
TED Talks

Jay Bradner: Open-source cancer research

12th - Higher Ed
How does cancer know it's cancer? At Jay Bradner's lab, they found a molecule that might hold the answer, JQ1. But instead of patenting it and reaping the profits (as many other labs have done) -- they published their findings and mailed...
Instructional Video4:06
Bozeman Science

Chemical and Physical Processes

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the difference between chemical and physical processes. Chemical processes occur when bonds are broken and reformed. Physical processes occur when intermolecular forces are broken and reformed. A gray...
Instructional Video24:50
TED Talks

TED: Meet the scientist couple driving an mRNA vaccine revolution | Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci

12th - Higher Ed
As COVID-19 spread, BioNTech cofounders Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci had one goal: to make a safe, effective vaccine faster than ever before. In this illuminating conversation with head of TED Chris Anderson, the immunologists (and...
Instructional Video11:36
Crash Course

Intro to Substitution Reactions - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Substitution reactions can have really powerful effects, both good and bad, in our bodies. You might remember substitution reactions as displacement reactions from general chemistry, but (you guessed it!) in organic chemistry they’re a...