Instructional Video3:22
MinutePhysics

The Physics of Caramel: How To Make a Caramelized Sugar Cube

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how the physics and chemistry of sugar (in particular, how it melts, and how it caramelizes) is more complicated than you might think. It involves fructose, sucrose, glucose, and a sticky mess. Credits: Gallium...
Instructional Video3:54
Crash Course Kids

Wood, Water, and Properties

3rd - 8th
Quick, think of three words to describe yourself. TIME'S UP! What did you think of? Chances are you thought of descriptive words that we call Properties. In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina talks about how properties help us...
Instructional Video1:31
SciShow

How Does Tape Work?

12th - Higher Ed
Ever wonder what makes tape sticky? Hank will tell you in this episode of Quick Questions!
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

Earth's Not-So-Juicy Center

12th - Higher Ed
Hank takes us on a journey to center of the Earth to explain both how the solid core formed and why it is so important for life as we know it.
Instructional Video4:19
Crash Course Kids

Oobleck and Non-Newtonian Fluids

3rd - 8th
Ever heard of Oobleck? How about Non-Newtonian fluids? Well, today Sabrina is going to show us that things can sometimes behave like a solid, and sometimes like a liquid depending on how much force is applied to them. In this episode of...
Instructional Video10:03
Crash Course

The Earth

12th - Higher Ed
Phil starts the planet-by-planet tour of the solar system right here at home, Earth.
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow Kids

Let’s Make Oobleck!

K - 5th
Jessi's in the lab, mixing up something kind of strange: Oobleck! Come find out all about this goo that can be a solid and a liquid at the same time, and then learn how to make some for yourself!
Instructional Video4:33
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What is metallic glass? - Ashwini Bharathula

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Steel and plastic are essential to much of our infrastructure and technology. Steel is strong and hard, but difficult to shape intricately. Plastic can take on just about any form, but it's weak and soft. Wouldn't it be nice if there...
Instructional Video2:07
SciShow

Why Does Melted Cheese Taste So Much Better?

12th - Higher Ed
It goes on some of our favorite foods, and it can even make our least favorite foods taste better. Yes, we're talking about melted cheese.
Instructional Video2:00
MinuteEarth

What Happened to This Car?

12th - Higher Ed
Here we explain how Port Royal - "the most wicked and sinful city in the world", cars, roads, and huge buildings can sink into the ground during during earthquakes or blasting.
Instructional Video3:16
SciShow Kids

What Are Clouds Made Of?

K - 5th
Clouds can look like castles made of cotton candy, or they can be thin and wispy. But have you ever wondered what clouds actually are?
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

The 17+ Different Kinds of Ice!

12th - Higher Ed
Ice is ice, right? Wrong! From the vacuum of deep space to the inside of ice giant planets, ice gets stretched and squished into way more forms than what we find here on Earth.
Instructional Video6:05
SciShow

Water Is WAY Weirder Than We Thought

12th - Higher Ed
Water is one of the most abundant and important substances on Earth, so you think we'd know everything there is to know about it. But it turns out water is way weirder, and it often behaves in ways that leave scientists with more...
Instructional Video4:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Magical metals, how shape memory alloys work - Ainissa Ramirez

Pre-K - Higher Ed
From robots to braces to the Mars Rover, see how a special kind of metal called shape memory alloys advance technology in everyday ways that we don't always realize.
Instructional Video8:47
SciShow

9 Scientific Cooking Techniques

12th - Higher Ed
All cooking is science: we use chemistry and physics to steam, fry, bake, or microwave almost all of our meals. However, there are some cooking methods that delve into even deeper and stranger scientific territory.
Instructional Video4:31
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The chemistry of cold packs - John Pollard

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you stick water in the freezer, it will take a few hours to freeze into ice. How is it, then, that cold packs go from room temperature to near freezing in mere seconds? John Pollard details the chemistry of the cold pack, shedding...
Instructional Video3:24
SciShow

How to Supercool Water: A SciShow Experiment

12th - Higher Ed
Water doesn't always freeze when it's supposed to. Learn about supercooling, and how to supercool a bottle of water at home -- and then turn it to ice instantly!
Instructional Video2:20
SciShow

Why Is Ice Slippery?

12th - Higher Ed
Winter: It's that time of year when you're out for a stroll and maybe miss a hidden patch of ice and fall flat on your butt. Why you gotta play us this way, ice?
Instructional Video4:02
SciShow Kids

Why Do We Put Salt on Icy Sidewalks? | Winter Science | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
It's snowing and Mister Brown needs to go put some salt on the Fort's front steps. But Squeaks wants to know, why do we put salt on icy sidewalks? Second Grade Next Generation Science Standards Disciplinary Core Ideas: PS1.A:...
Instructional Video4:43
SciShow

The Hunt for the Highest Melting Point

12th - Higher Ed
What has the highest melting point known to us? Hank Green explains in this episode of SciShow.
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow Kids

Why Does Cooking Eggs Make Them Hard?

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks grab a snack and learn all about why boiling eggs makes them hard! Second Grade Next Generation Science Standards Disciplinary Core Ideas: PS1.A: Structure and Properties of Matter - Different kinds of matter exist and...
Instructional Video10:12
Bozeman Science

Bernoulli's Equation

12th - Higher Ed
In the video Paul Andersen explains how Bernoulli's Equation describes the conservation of energy in a fluid. The equation describes the pressure energy, potential energy, and kinetic energy of a fluid at a single point. A sample problem...
Instructional Video3:49
Crash Course Kids

Part(icles) of Your World

3rd - 8th
Have you ever heard the phrase, 'You look like a Million Bucks?' Well, you do... but you also look like a million particles. In this episode, Sabrina talks to us about matter and particles and that all matter is made up of particles....
Instructional Video5:14
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What is entropy? - Jeff Phillips

Pre-K - Higher Ed
There's a concept that's crucial to chemistry and physics. It helps explain why physical processes go one way and not the other: why ice melts, why cream spreads in coffee, why air leaks out of a punctured tire. It's entropy, and it's...