Instructional Video11:04
SciShow

How Alchemy Led to Modern-Day Chemistry & Medicine

12th - Higher Ed
At the heart of alchemy was the quest to turn ordinary metals into gold. Despite the hopelessness of that goal, alchemists still made a lot of discoveries that formed the foundation of modern chemistry and medicine.
Instructional Video11:13
SciShow

5 Ways Biology Is Transforming Buildings

12th - Higher Ed
Throughout history humans have come up with lots of different ways to build shelters for themselves. But sometimes, inspiration for better construction materials comes from nature, in structures you might not expect — like the scales on a
Instructional Video3:04
SciShow

The Alien Egg Experiment

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us another simple experiment that demonstrates the important biochemical process of osmosis by turning a chicken egg into a frightening alien-looking thing.
Instructional Video6:12
SciShow

Why Scientists Are Using Mice to Make Human Cells

12th - Higher Ed
Stem cells are widely believed to hold great promise in medical research because of their ability to transform into all sorts of other cell types, and scientists can grow it in living mice.
Instructional Video16:32
TED Talks

TED: The future of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy | Rick Doblin

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Could psychedelics help us heal from trauma and mental illnesses? Researcher Rick Doblin has spent the past three...
Instructional Video2:58
MinuteEarth

How to Make a Seashell - Just Add Water

12th - Higher Ed
Why do shell building living creatures live near the surface of the ocean? Learn how chemistry creates a dissolving depth for calcium and determines where shell builders can live.
Instructional Video12:23
Crash Course

Retrosynthesis and Liquid-Liquid Extraction: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
As we construct more complex organic molecules, it can start to feel like decrypting a complex code. Organic synthesis takes simple starting materials, and turns them into complex structures, and reverse engineering can help us figure...
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

The Brewer Who Secretly Revolutionized Statistics | Great Minds: William Gosset

12th - Higher Ed
When you have a study with a small sample size, how do you know that the results represent the broader population? Well, thanks to a brewer who needed to assess beer quality in the early 1900s, we now have a simple statistical test that...
Instructional Video9:15
TED Talks

TED: How green hydrogen could end the fossil fuel era | Vaitea Cowan

12th - Higher Ed
As climate change accelerates, finding clean alternatives to fossil fuels is more urgent than ever. Social entrepreneur Vaitea Cowan believes green hydrogen is the answer. Watch as she shares her team's work mass producing electrolyzers...
Instructional Video3:14
SciShow

3 New Discoveries in Space

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares three cool discoveries in space science, including a celestial crucible of phosphorous, noble gases found in a supernova, and plumes of water vapor on Europa.
Instructional Video4:57
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do we pass gas? - Purna Kashyap

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Flatulence is a daily phenomenon. In fact, most human beings pass gas 10-20 times a day (yes, that includes you). Where does your bodily gas come from? Purna Kashyap takes us on a journey into the intestines, shedding light on how gas is...
Instructional Video13:14
TED Talks

TED: The deep sea's medicinal secrets | Sam Afoullouss

12th - Higher Ed
Under the sea, untold wonders await in the form of untapped medicinal potential. Chemist Sam Afoullouss dives into the science behind natural remedies, explaining why the ocean's great (and still largely unexplored) biodiversity is ideal...
Instructional Video12:12
Crash Course

The Aldol and Claisen Reactions: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Organic chemistry is a great workout for your brain, and to keep its energy up, your brain needs glucose. To maintain blood glucose levels, our bodies go through a process called gluconeogenesis, which involves the important type of...
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

The 2017 Nobel Prizes: Biological Clocks and Microscopy

12th - Higher Ed
Last week, the recipients of the 2017 Nobel Prizes were announced. We take a closer look at the winners of the Physiology and Chemistry Awards, whose breakthroughs change the way we study sleep, and allow us to look at microscopic...
Instructional Video10:31
SciShow

Sneaky Ways Chemists Are Making Our World Safer

12th - Higher Ed
The path that products take to get onto store shelves doesn’t always leave the best impact on the environment. But with green chemistry, chemists have found ways to make the production of some items safer for both people and the planet.
Instructional Video5:06
SciShow

Tapputi-Belatekallim: The First Chemical Engineer | Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
A perfumer from Ancient Babylon named Tapputi-Belatekallim is possibly history's first recorded chemist, and some of the techniques she used are still in practice today.
Instructional Video5:58
SciShow

SPNs Might Change the World, So What Are They?

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers created a "super jelly" that can survive being run over with a car, and its weird properties take advantage of some novel chemistry.
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow

The Lost City and the Origin of Life | Weird Places

12th - Higher Ed
Hydrothermal vents are some of the most extreme environments on the planet. But in 2000, scientists discovered a vent unlike any other, one that spews white smoke and is 10 times older. And some think it may help us understand how all...
Instructional Video3:43
SciShow

Exotic Chemistry: World's Oldest Water and The Rarest Element

12th - Higher Ed
This week's SciShow news brings you discoveries involving two of the most exotic substances on Earth - the world's rarest element and the world's oldest water. Two great tastes that taste great together? Stay tuned to find out.
Instructional Video7:20
TED Talks

TED: Smelfies, and other experiments in synthetic biology | Ani Liu

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could take a smell selfie, a smelfie? What if you had a lipstick that caused plants to grow where you kiss? Ani Liu explores the intersection of technology and sensory perception, and her work is wedged somewhere between...
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 Video4:47
SciShow

How the Electricity in Our Bodies Could Fight Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
One potential avenue for cancer treatment uses electricity not from any outside machine, but from within our own bodies.
Instructional Video4:24
Bozeman Science

Kinetic Reaction Control

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how a spontaneous process may take either the thermodynamically controlled or the kinetic controlled pathway. If the activation energy determines the path taken then the process is under kinetic...
Instructional Video4:11
SciShow

3 Surprising Things Matter Does Under Extreme Pressure

12th - Higher Ed
Things get weird under pressure.