Instructional Video4:42
Bozeman Science

Biological and Polymer Systems

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the structure of a biomolecule fits the function of the biomolecule. For example and enzyme must interact correctly with a substrate to lower the activation energy, The covalent and non-covalent...
Instructional Video13:56
TED Talks

TED: How we can make crops survive without water | Jill Farrant

12th - Higher Ed
As the world's population grows and the effects of climate change come into sharper relief, we'll have to feed more people using less arable land. Molecular biologist Jill Farrant studies a rare phenomenon that may help: "resurrection...
Instructional Video1:28
Be Smart

Carbon and Oxygen and You: Explained

12th - Higher Ed
A little bit of explanation for the cycle of carbon and oxygen
Instructional Video6:44
SciShow

Why Can’t We Make New Stradivari Violins?

12th - Higher Ed
Stradivarius are synonymous with quality, but how we can replicate their sound is a mystery!
Instructional Video5:28
Bozeman Science

Chemical Change

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how chemical differs from physical change. In the laboratory macroscopic observations are used to infer changes at the particulate level. Evidence for chemical change include gas production, change in...
Instructional Video10:44
Crash Course

Bonding Models and Lewis Structures: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Models are great, except they're also usually inaccurate. In this episode of Crash Course Chemistry, Hank discusses why we need models in the world and how we can learn from them... even when they're almost completely wrong. Plus, Lewis...
Instructional Video8:46
Bozeman Science

Periodicity

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains why atoms in the periodic table show trends in ionization energy, atomic radii, electronegativity and charge. All of these trends are explained through Coulomb's Law. A brief description of Dmitri...
Instructional Video11:16
Crash Course

Polarity Resonance and Electron Pushing - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve all heard the phrase “opposites attract.” It may or may not be true for people, but it’s definitely true in organic chemistry. In this episode of Crash Course Organic Chemistry, we’re learning about electronegativity, polarity,...
Instructional Video4:59
SciShow

Quantum Tunneling Takes a Surprisingly Long Time

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum tunneling happens when a particle seemingly teleports across a barrier. But despite how instantaneous this event sounds, recent research suggests that it doesn’t happen nearly as fast as you might think.
Instructional Video13:08
Crash Course

Aromaticity, Hückel's Rule, and Chemical Equivalence in NMR: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve been paying attention so far in this series, you’ve probably heard of benzene. This molecule is flat, cyclic, and belongs to a special class of compounds known as aromatics. In this episode of Crash Course Organic Chemistry,...
Instructional Video11:06
Crash Course

More EAS - Electron Donating and Withdrawing Groups: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
In the previous episode we discussed what happens when we use electrophilic aromatic substitution to add a group to a benzene ring, but what happens when you try to add even more groups? Well, things get a little more complicated. In...
Instructional Video2:57
SciShow Kids

How Do Soap and Water Make Us Clean Chemistry for Kids

K - 5th
A SciShow Kids viewer wrote us and asked: How does soap work? Find out what really happens when you take a bath!
Instructional Video9:07
SciShow

5 Chemicals That Are in (Almost) Everything You Eat

12th - Higher Ed
Discover 5 key chemicals that we use to make our food taste the way it's supposed to taste, look the way we expect it to look, and generally survive the journey to our tables intact.
Instructional Video11:44
Crash Course

In Da Club - Membranes & Transport: Crash Course Biology

12th - Higher Ed
Hank describes how cells regulate their contents and communicate with one another via mechanisms within the cell membrane.
Instructional Video7:56
Bozeman Science

Using Gibbs Free Energy

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how you can use the Gibbs Free Energy equation to determine if a process is spontaneous or not spontaneous. If the _G is less than zero the process is spontaneous. If the _G is greater than zero the...
Instructional Video11:53
Crash Course

Alchemy: History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
In fantasy stories, charlatans in fancy robes promise to turn lead into gold. But real alchemists weren’t just mystical misers. They were skilled experimentalists, backed by theories of matter. And they played a huge role in the...
Instructional Video11:22
TED Talks

TED: The secrets I find on the mysterious ocean floor | Laura Robinson

12th - Higher Ed
Hundreds of meters below the surface of the ocean, Laura Robinson probes the steep slopes of massive undersea mountains. She's on the hunt for thousand-year-old corals that she can test in a nuclear reactor to discover how the ocean...
Instructional Video13:59
TED Talks

Jonathan Wilker: What sticky sea creatures can teach us about making glue

12th - Higher Ed
What if we could harness the sticking powers of sea creatures like mussels, oysters and barnacles, which refuse to budge even on wet, stormy coastlines? Dive into the wonderful world of animals that make their own glue and cement with...
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

How to Build a Rocket Engine in Your Kitchen (Experiment Episode)

12th - Higher Ed
Hank demonstrates how to build a hybrid rocket engine in your kitchen!
Instructional Video11:15
Crash Course

Carboxylic Acids: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
What do the smells of feet, armpits, vomit, and goats all have in common? (Besides being super gross…) Carboxylic acids! Despite being responsible for some of our least favorite odors, carboxylic acids are also super useful in organic...
Instructional Video12:51
Crash Course

Big Guns: The Muscular System - CrashCourse Biology

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us the story of the complicated chemical dance that allows our skeletal muscles to contract and relax.
Instructional Video7:31
Bozeman Science

Dipole Forces

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen describes the intermolecular forces associated with dipoles. A dipole is a molecule that has split charge. Dipole may form associations with other dipoles, induced dipoles or ions. An important type of...
Instructional Video5:35
Be Smart

Is Sugar A Drug?

12th - Higher Ed
It's Okay to Be Smart: Is Sugar A Drug?
Instructional Video7:33
Crash Course

Hydrocarbon Derivatives - Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Functional groups? Functional groups within functional groups? Hank takes today's Crash Course video to discuss some confusing ideas about Hydrocarbon Derivatives, but then makes it all make more sense. -- Table of Contents Alcohols...