Instructional Video10:23
SciShow

The End of Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us an inclusive overview of how everything in the universe is thought to have begun, and how cosmologists predict it will all come to an end. Now get happy!
Instructional Video3:09
MinutePhysics

The Physics of Car Crashes

12th - Higher Ed
How is the chemical energy of gasoline transformed into kinetic energy of a moving car? And where does that kinetic energy go when the car crashes into something and stops moving?
Instructional Video3:05
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Dark matter: How does it explain a star's speed? - Don Lincoln

Pre-K - Higher Ed
All the stars in a spiral galaxy rotate around a center -- but to astronomers, the speed that each star travels wasn't making sense. Why didn't stars slow down toward the edges as expected? Don Lincoln explains how a mysterious force...
Instructional Video4:59
SciShow

Zombie Stars Discovered!

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space reveals the discovery of a whole new kind of supernova, and the undead stars they leave behind.
Instructional Video4:56
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do nerves work? - Elliot Krane

Pre-K - Higher Ed
At any moment, there is an electrical storm coursing through your body. Discover how chemical reactions create an electric current that drives our responses to everything from hot pans to a mother's caress.
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

We're Turning Pulsars into Galactic GPS!

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have thought for awhile that pulsars could be used as a sort of galactic positioning system, and astronomers have published the most advanced topographical map of Titan to date!
Instructional Video6:02
TED Talks

Marco Tempest: The electric rise and fall of Nikola Tesla

12th - Higher Ed
Combining projection mapping and a pop-up book, Marco Tempest tells the visually arresting story of Nikola Tesla -- called "the greatest geek who ever lived" -- from his triumphant invention of alternating current to his penniless last...
Instructional Video2:33
SciShow

The Rainbow Gem Made from Ancient Sea Creatures

12th - Higher Ed
Ammonite fossils can be found all over world, but in one place, something happened that turned their remains into rainbow-colored gems that are more rare than diamonds!
Instructional Video11:04
TED Talks

Michael Hansmeyer: Building unimaginable shapes

12th - Higher Ed
Inspired by cell division, Michael Hansmeyer writes algorithms that design outrageously fascinating shapes and forms with millions of facets. No person could draft them by hand, but they're buildable -- and they could revolutionize the...
Instructional Video8:42
TED Talks

TED: The forgotten art of the zoetrope | eric Dyer

12th - Higher Ed
Artist eric Dyer spent years working at a computer to produce images for the screen. Longing to get his hands back on his work, he began exploring the zoetrope, a popular 19th-century device that was used to create the illusion of motion...
Instructional Video4:24
SciShow

A Dying Hot Jupiter and The Birth of Carbon Planets

12th - Higher Ed
We think we discovered a Hot Jupiter being consumed by its star! Hank Green explains this and the birth of carbon planets in this episode of SciShow News.
Instructional Video2:11
MinuteEarth

Why is All Sand the Same?

12th - Higher Ed
Why is All Sand the Same?
Instructional Video14:02
TED Talks

TED: Dignity isn't a privilege. It's a worker's right | Abigail Disney

12th - Higher Ed
What's the purpose of a company? In this bold talk, activist and filmmaker Abigail Disney imagines a world where companies have a moral obligation to place their workers above shareholders, calling on Disney (and all corporations) to...
Instructional Video11:11
TED Talks

Ben Katchor: Comics of bygone New York

12th - Higher Ed
In this captivating talk from the TED archive, cartoonist Ben Katchor reads from his comic strips. These perceptive, surreal stories find the profound hopes and foibles of history (and modern New York) preserved in objects like light...
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Inside a cartoonist's world - Liza Donnelly

Pre-K - Higher Ed
From cave drawings to the Sunday paper, artists have been visualizing ideas -- cartoons -- for centuries. New Yorker cartoonist Liza Donnelly walks us through the many stages every cartoon goes through, starting with an idea and turning...
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

Why Frogs Sometimes Fall From the Sky

12th - Higher Ed
It doesn't seem possible, but animal rain is definitely real, and there is an actual scientific explanation for it... probably.
Instructional Video3:22
SciShow

4 Awesome Future Space Missions

12th - Higher Ed
Hank fills us in on the four exploratory missions to space that he is most excited about - New Horizons is going to Pluto and the Kuiper belt; Juno is on it's way to Jupiter; Dawn is exploring two large asteroids; Rosetta will land on a...
Instructional Video10:56
TED Talks

TED: We could kick-start life on another planet. Should we? | Betül Kaçar

12th - Higher Ed
Life makes our planet an incredibly exotic place compared to the rest of the known universe, says astrobiologist Betül Kaçar, whose research uses statistics and mathematical models to simulate ancient environments and gather insights...
Instructional Video3:41
SciShow

Dry New Planets and The Search for Dirty Aliens

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space shares the latest news from space research, including the first definitive detection of water on an exoplanet, and a new theory for how we should search for alien civilizations.
Instructional Video44:28
TED Talks

Frank Gehry: My days as a young rebel

12th - Higher Ed
Before he was a legend, architect Frank Gehry takes a whistlestop tour of his early work, from his house in Venice Beach to the American Center in Paris, which was under construction (and much on his mind) when he gave this talk.
Instructional Video11:03
TED Talks

Scott Summit: Beautiful artificial limbs

12th - Higher Ed
Prosthetics can't replicate the look and feel of lost limbs but they can carry a lot of personality. Designer Scott Summit shows 3D-printed, individually designed prosthetic legs that are unabashedly artificial and completely personal --...
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

Rogue Planets, Loners of the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Meet one of the newest celestial bodies to be discovered: rogue planets, worlds that hurtle around the galaxy without any parent star. Caitlin Hofmeister explains how we found them, and where we think they might have come from.
Instructional Video12:12
TED Talks

Heather Barnett: What humans can learn from semi-intelligent slime

12th - Higher Ed
Inspired by biological design and self-organizing systems, artist Heather Barnett co-creates with physarum polycephalum, a eukaryotic microorganism that lives in cool, moist areas. What can people learn from the semi-intelligent slime...
Instructional Video3:17
SciShow

Strontium: It Knows Where You've Been

12th - Higher Ed
Your teeth contain traces of strontium isotopes that can reveal where you lived while they were forming.