Instructional Video5:55
Crash Course Kids

Weather In Space (the Rocky Planets)

3rd - 8th
Do other planets have weather? It turns out that, yes, they do! But, the weather isn't all the same on other planets because of things like atmosphere. In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina takes us on a tour of the weather on...
Instructional Video14:22
Crash Course

Exploring the Universe Crash Course Big History 2

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green, Hank Green, and Emily Graslie teach you about what happened in the Universe after the big bang. They'll teach you about cosmic background radiation, how a bunch of hydrogen and helium turned into stars, formed...
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

Thrusters That Eat Teflon! Pulsed Plasma Thrusters

12th - Higher Ed
Pulsed plasma thrusters use the same stuff that’s on your frying pan to make spacecraft zoom around the universe. And they’ve been doing it since the 1960s.
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 Video3:32
SciShow

Cosmic Cocktails Oxygen and Alcohol in Space!

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists studying Comets 67P and Lovejoy have discovered oxygen, alcohol, and the building block of sugar. Sounds like a regular Friday night on earth, but it’s the first time we’ve found any of these things on a comet.
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

Why Astronomy Hasn't Really Changed Since the 1900s

12th - Higher Ed
The way modern researchers study the sky hasn’t really changed in the last few centuries. For the most part, astronomers still study things by analyzing their light.
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow

Why We're Building Underground Telescopes

12th - Higher Ed
Obviously most telescopes need to see the sky to do their job, but when you are studying a wave that can pass right through the earth, the best place for your telescope might be underground.
Instructional Video14:47
Crash Course

Scientific Revolution: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
There was a lot of bad stuff going on in Europe in the 17th century. We've seen wars, plagues, and unrest of all types. But, there is some good news. Huge advances were underway in the scientific community in Europe at this time. In this...
Instructional Video5:57
SciShow

How Earth’s Tides Gave Us Life As We Know It

12th - Higher Ed
While astronomers are busy searching for life beyond Earth, they’ve also started asking another question: If life seems so difficult to find, then why is our world so full of it? One answer might be overhead right now: the Moon!
Instructional Video4:40
SciShow

What If the Universe Isn't Uniform?

12th - Higher Ed
According to the cosmological principle, the universe is more or less the same in all directions. But what happens when we put this to the test?
Instructional Video8:50
PBS

How Close To The Sun Can Humanity Get?

12th - Higher Ed
The Sun: an entity worshipped as a god throughout time and across cultures. The source of all life and sustenance for our little blue space rock, and also a force of unthinkable destructive power. But soon humanity will reach out its...
Instructional Video7:27
SciShow

The Evolution of Male Homosexuality

12th - Higher Ed
Hank goes from space to sex and then to motherhood, covering the SpaceX launch, a mission to the moons of Jupiter, intersexual workplace rivalries, the evolution of male homosexuality, the fossil evidence of squishy baby skulls, toddler...
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

The Milky Way's Black Hole Burped 3.5 Million Years Ago

12th - Higher Ed
The black hole at the center of the Milky Way is quiet now, but new evidence suggests that it woke up around 3.5 million years ago. And Enceladus may have the the building blocks of the building blocks of life.
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

What If Dark Energy Doesn’t Exist?

12th - Higher Ed
Dark Energy is what we call the mysterious force that seems to be pushing the universe apart. By some calculations, it makes up 70% of everything in nature. Or...maybe it doesn’t exist at all! Plus, Juno’s observations give us new...
Instructional Video4:56
SciShow

There's Apparently an Asteroid Between Mercury and Venus - Space News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have found the first asteroid orbiting closer to the Sun than Venus, and recently, some scientists have been looking at Earth, trying to understand the origins of our protective magnetic field.
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

Were the Planets Always in the Same Order?

12th - Higher Ed
Four rocky inner planets and four gaseous outer planets - makes sense, right? But when astronomers turned their eyes to planets beyond our star system they found out that many systems are set up differently. Why?
Instructional Video14:14
Crash Course

The Sun & The Earth Crash Course Big History 3

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green, Hank Green, and Emily Graslie teach you about our Sun, and the formation of the planets. We're going to focus on the formation and development of the Earth, because that's where people live. You'll learn about the...
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

How Computers Revolutionized Space Travel

12th - Higher Ed
As computers have gotten more powerful, they’ve completely transformed how we explore the solar system. And along the way, the space industry has given computer science a boost too.
Instructional Video4:56
SciShow

The Pioneer Probes Are Way Off-Course

12th - Higher Ed
The Pioneer 10 and 11 probes were launched to explore outer space, but in the 80s scientists discovered they were veering off-course, and we had no idea why!
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

3 Ways to Slingshot a Star

12th - Higher Ed
The star-mapping satellite Gaia has found more than 20 stars speeding across the Milky Way toward intergalactic space. There are just a few things that can slingshot a star out of a galaxy and all of them take some extreme gravitational...
Instructional Video13:30
Crash Course

The Deep Future: Crash Course Big History

12th - Higher Ed
Finally, after what seems like eons and eons, the end is nigh. We're talking not only about the end of Crash Course Big History, but also the end of everything. The end of humanity and the end of the universe.John and Hank Green will...
Instructional Video6:11
SciShow

The Strange Case of the Hypatia Stone

12th - Higher Ed
The Hypatia stone is one of the weirdest rocks on the planet. It's not just out of this world, it might be out of this solar system!
Instructional Video6:45
SciShow

How Two Dead Stars Sparked a New Field of Astronomy

12th - Higher Ed
Pulsars are more than just cool blinking lights shining across the universe. The discovery of the first binary pulsar paved the way for gravitational wave astronomy astronomy today.
Instructional Video3:37
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Could comets be the source of life on Earth? - Justin Dowd

Pre-K - Higher Ed
While comets were historically thought to be ill omens of war and famine, recent science has revealed that these celestial wonders actually contain amino acids, the building blocks of life on Earth. Justin Dowd explores the implications...