Instructional Video2:42
MinutePhysics

Why is the Solar System Flat?

12th - Higher Ed
Why is the Solar System Flat?
Instructional Video12:51
SciShow

The Surprisingly Useful Physics of Desk Toys

12th - Higher Ed
How do Newton's Cradles connect to cancer treatments? Let's unpack the physics of some of our favorite desk toys, from dippy birds to perpetual motion machines, and explore how these scientific principles can be used beyond an office desk.
Instructional Video6:43
SciShow

This Toxic Liquid Telescope from the 1850s Is Finally Useful

12th - Higher Ed
Sometimes looking into a pool of a toxic liquid holds the secrets of the universe–or maybe just this one time.
Instructional Video6:02
SciShow

The Spiders That Turn Stars into Planets

12th - Higher Ed
Neutron stars, are some of the most extreme phenomenon in the universe. It's doubly so for a subset known as pulsars. Some are spinning so fast, and are so massive, that astronomers aren't entirely sure how they got to be that way. One...
Instructional Video13:30
PBS

What If Physics IS NOT Describing Reality?

12th - Higher Ed
Neils Bohr said, “It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how Nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about Nature.” Well it turns out that if we pay attention to this subtle difference, some of the most...
Instructional Video15:00
PBS

What If We Live in a Superdeterministic Universe?

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re going to try to save reality - or at least realism. However this rescue effort has a price; one that you may not be willing to pay. Your very soul, or at least your free will, is on the line.
Instructional Video13:26
PBS

NEW DISCOVERY About Supermassive Black Holes Explained!

12th - Higher Ed
Astrophysicists have discovered a black hole that for millions of years has been blasting vast particle beams in opposite directions across the sky. And has recently swiveled to point its one of these jets directly at us. Is this an...
Instructional Video12:49
PBS

How Black Holes Spin Space Time

12th - Higher Ed
If there’s one thing cooler than a black hole it’s a rotating black hole. Why? Because we can use them as futuristic power generators, galactic-scale bombs, and portals to other universes. Black holes are self-sustaining holes in the...
Instructional Video14:05
PBS

Electrons DO NOT Spin

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum mechanics has a lot of weird stuff - but there’s thing that everyone agrees that no one understands. I’m talking about quantum spin. Let’s find out how chasing this elusive little behavior of the electron led us to some of the...
Instructional Video16:01
PBS

Is 'Perpetual Motion' Possible with Superfluids?

12th - Higher Ed
The weird rules of quantum mechanics lead to all sorts of bizarre phenomena on tiny scales— particles teleporting through walls or being in multiple places at once or simultaneously existing and not. Shame all this magical behavior...
Instructional Video15:35
PBS

What Makes The Strong Force Strong?

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum mechanics gets weirder as you go to smaller sizes and higher energies. It’s strange enough for atoms, but positively bizarre when we get to the atomic nucleus. And today we’re going nuclear, as we dive into the weird world of...
Instructional Video15:29
PBS

The Equation That Explains (Nearly) Everything!

12th - Higher Ed
The Standard Model of particle physics is arguably the most successful theory in the history of physics. It predicts the results of experiments with a numerical precision unmatched by any other branch of science, and it does so almost...
Instructional Video13:20
PBS

The Crisis in Cosmology

12th - Higher Ed
The search for a single number: the hubble constant, which is the rate of expansion of our universe, has consumed astronomers for generations. Finally, two powerful and independent methods have refined its measurement to unprecedented...
Instructional Video11:10
PBS

The Real Science of the EHT Black Hole

12th - Higher Ed
So, how do you take a picture of a black hole? The beast in question is the supermassive black hole in the center of this – the M87 elliptical galaxy. It has an estimated mass of several billion times that of the Sun, which gives it an...
Instructional Video13:53
PBS

Our Antimatter, Mirrored, Time-Reversed Universe

12th - Higher Ed
The foundations of quantum theory rests on its symmetries. For example, it should be impossible to distinguish our universe from one that is that is the perfect mirror opposite in charge, handedness, and the direction of time. But one by...
Instructional Video16:14
PBS

Are there Undiscovered Elements Beyond The Periodic Table?

12th - Higher Ed
Adamantium, bolognium, dilithium. Element Zero, Kryptonite. Mythril, Netherite, Orichalcum, Unobtanium. We love the idea of fictional elements with miraculous properties that science has yet to discover. But is it really possible that...
Instructional Video13:11
PBS

Black Hole Harmonics

12th - Higher Ed
When physicists talk about black holes they’re usually referring to highly theoretical objects – static, unchanging black holes viewed from “infinitely” far away. This makes everything clean and simple enough to attempt the already...
Instructional Video12:50
PBS

Sound Waves from the Beginning of Time

12th - Higher Ed
Invisible to the naked eye, our night sky is scattered with the 100s of billions of galaxies the fill the known universe. Like the stars, these galaxies form constellations – hidden patterns that echo the reverberations of matter and...
Instructional Video14:31
PBS

Perpetual Motion From Negative Mass?

12th - Higher Ed
Challenge question: if 1kg of apples is $5 and 2kg is $10, how much is -1kg of apples? The answer? Priceless. Because you could use negative-mass apples to build warp drives, travel in time, and construct a perpetual motion machine. In...
Instructional Video3:57
MinutePhysics

Geosynchronous Orbits are WEIRD

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the physics of geosynchronous and geostationary orbits, why they exist, when they don't, when they're useful for communication/satellite TV, etc.
Instructional Video2:17
SciShow

Coriolis Effect: IDTIMWYTIM

12th - Higher Ed
Does your toilet water drain differently than in the other hemisphere? Is it because of the Coriolis effect? Hank has some things to clarify about these questions, and more in this edition of I Don't Think It Means What You Think It Means.
Instructional Video2:22
SciShow

What If Earth Spun the Other Way?

12th - Higher Ed
How different would things be if Earth had always rotated in the opposite direction? Hosted by: Stefan Chin
Instructional Video12:04
SciShow

8 Incredibly Brilliant Spiders

12th - Higher Ed
They get a rap for being spooky, but whether it’s building bridges across rivers or solving puzzles, spiders are way cooler than you might think. Many have smart or elaborate features that allow them to do some pretty extraordinary...
Instructional Video4:30
SciShow

Why Days Are Getting Longer

12th - Higher Ed
You can complain about having the longest day ever today, and here is the science to prove it!