Instructional Video7:14
Crash Course

Traveling Waves: Crash Course Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Waves are cool. The more we learn about waves, the more we learn about a lot of things in physics. Everything from earthquakes to music! Ropes can tell us a lot about how traveling waves work so, in this episode of Crash Course Physics,...
Instructional Video3:13
SciShow Kids

How Far Can You Jump?

K - 5th
This video is brought to you by the Child and Teen Checkups program of the Minnesota Department of Health.
Instructional Video7:03
Bozeman Science

Torque

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen begins by discriminating between translation and rotational motion. He then explains how a torque is the product of the lever arm and the force perpendicular. The lever arm must be perpendicular to the axis of...
Instructional Video9:57
Crash Course

How Not to Set Your Pizza on Fire: Crash Course Engineering #15

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re going to explain how exchangers...exchange heat. We’ll look at concentric tubes, finned tubes, plate heat exchangers, and shell-and-tube heat exchangers. And we’ll look at some equations to help us sort through heat transfer...
Instructional Video5:35
Bozeman Science

Ideal Gas Law

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the pressure, volume, amount, and temperature of an ideal gas are related. Absolute zero of a gas can be determined by varying the temperature and measuring the corresponding volume of a gas...
Instructional Video2:43
SciShow

Why Is It so Hard to Swat a Fly?

12th - Higher Ed
Flies are evasive buzzing machines that make it nearly impossible to swat. Luckily, science has some explanation to help you predict their next move.
Instructional Video3:25
SciShow

Cymatics: Turning Sound into Art

12th - Higher Ed
Sound waves vibrate more than just our eardrums, they can also make visual art!
Instructional Video0:51
SciShow

Why bronze feels better than silver #shorts #science #SciShow

12th - Higher Ed
Why bronze feels better than silver #shorts #science #SciShow
Instructional Video2:22
SciShow

Why Are Metals Shiny

12th - Higher Ed
We can all appreciate pretty shiny things, but what makes them shiny?
Instructional Video9:36
Bozeman Science

Sound Waves

12th - Higher Ed
Mr. Andersen explains how sound waves are created and perceived. A brief discussion of pitch and loudness are included. A generated sound of varying pitches is also included.
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What light can teach us about the universe - Pete Edwards

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Humanity has long been looking at the universe and asking the big questions: How did it begin? How will it end? Cosmologists are searching hard for the answers, but where do they even start? The answer is light. Pete Edwards outlines the...
Instructional Video11:04
Bozeman Science

Cell Membranes

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how cells are selectively permeable with the help of their cell membrane. The main constituents of the cell membrane, including cholesterol, glycolipids, glycoproteins, phospholipids, and proteins are included. The...
Instructional Video9:18
Crash Course

Cycles in the Sky

12th - Higher Ed
This week we build on our naked eye observations from last week and take a look at the cyclical phenomena that we can see at work in the universe.
Instructional Video4:26
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The Pangaea Pop-up - Michael Molina

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The supercontinent Pangaea, with its connected South America and Africa, broke apart 200 million years ago. But the continents haven't stopped shifting -- the tectonic plates beneath our feet (in Earth's two top layers, the lithosphere...
Instructional Video4:09
SciShow

How to Make a Meteor Shower

12th - Higher Ed
Learn about how one Japanese startup wants to offer meteor showers on demand, and how this will affect our scientific study of the mesosphere.
Instructional Video8:25
SciShow

How Do We Measure the Distance of Stars?

12th - Higher Ed
It's School of YouTube Week! Comic Relief and YouTube are partnering to send students to school! The Bad Astronomer Phil Plait teaches Hank how to measure the distance to the stars.
Instructional Video7:04
Bozeman Science

Entropy

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains that entropy is simply the dispersion of matter or energy. He begins with a series of video that show the natural direction of processes. According to the second law of thermodynamics the entropy may...
Instructional Video3:18
MinutePhysics

What IS Angular Momentum?

12th - Higher Ed
What IS Angular Momentum?
Instructional Video5:24
Bozeman Science

Positive and Negative Charge

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how all objects contain positive and negative charge. Neutral objects contain an equal amount of positive and negative charges. Charged objects have more positive or negative charges. Like charges...
Instructional Video12:19
Bozeman Science

Position vs. Time Graph - Part 1

12th - Higher Ed
Mr. Andersen shows you how to interpret a position vs. time graph for an object with constant velocity. The slope of the line is used to find the velocity. A phet simulation is also included.
Instructional Video11:28
MinutePhysics

Lorentz Transformations | Special Relativity Ch. 3

12th - Higher Ed
The previous videos in this series: Chapter 1: Why Relativity is Hard Chapter 2: Spacetime Diagrams This video is chapter 3 in my series on special relativity, and it covers boosts, galilean transformations, newtonian relativity, and of...
Instructional Video9:05
PBS

The Origin of Our First Interstellar Visitor

12th - Higher Ed
We were recently visited by a traveler from outside our solar system. This is the first time we've ever seen an object that came to us from interstellar space. It's name is 'Oumuamua.
Instructional Video7:29
Bozeman Science

PS4B - Electromagnetic Radiation

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen describes some of the properties of electromagnetic radiation. The electromagnetic spectrum varies by wavelength from radio waves to gamma rays. We only see a portion of the spectrum known as visible light. A...
Instructional Video3:22
SciShow Kids

What Causes Earthquakes?

K - 5th
Like it or not, the ground you’re walking on is always on the move! Join Jessi and Squeaks to learn how this movement can sometimes lead to earthquakes!